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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
McKASKLE v. WIGGINS, 465 U.S. 168 (1984)
465 U.S. 168
McKASKLE, ACTING DIRECTOR, TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS v.
WIGGINS
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 82-1135.
Argued November 9, 1983
Decided January 23, 1984
At his state robbery trial, respondent was permitted to proceed pro
se, but the trial court appointed standby counsel to assist him.
Before and during the trial, respondent frequently changed his mind
regarding the standby counsel's role, objecting to counsel's
participation on some occasions but agreeing to it on other occasions.
Following his conviction, respondent unsuccessfully moved for a new
trial on the ground that his standby counsel had unfairly interfered
with his presentation of his defense. After exhausting direct
appellate and state habeas corpus review, respondent filed a habeas
petition in Federal District Court, claiming that standby counsel's
conduct deprived him of his right to present his own defense, as
guaranteed by Faretta v. California,
422 U.S. 806 . The District Court denied the petition, but the
Court of Appeals reversed, holding that respondent's Sixth Amendment
right of self-representation was violated by the unsolicited
participation of overzealous standby counsel.
Held:
Respondent's Sixth Amendment right to conduct his own defense was
not violated, since it appears that he was allowed to make his own
appearances as he saw fit and that his standby counsel's unsolicited
involvement was held within reasonable limits. Pp. 173-187.
(a) The Counsel Clause of the Sixth Amendment implies a right in
the defendant to conduct his own defense, with assistance at what is
his, not counsel's, trial. Here, the record reveals that respondent
was accorded the rights of a pro se defendant to control the
organization and conduct of his own defense, to make motions, to
argue points of law, to participate in voir dire, to question
witnesses, and to address the court and the jury at appropriate
points in the trial. Pp. 173-175.
(b) The objectives of affirming a pro se defendant's dignity and
autonomy and of allowing the presentation of what may be his best
possible defense can both be achieved without categorically
silencing standby counsel. In determining whether a defendant's
Faretta rights have been respected, the primary focus must be on
whether he had a fair chance to present his case in his own way.
Such rights, however, do impose limits on the extent of standby
counsel's unsolicited participation.
[465 U.S. 168, 169] First, the pro se
defendant is entitled to preserve actual control over the case he
chooses to present to the jury, and, second, standby counsel's
participation without the defendant's consent should not be allowed
to destroy the jury's perception that the defendant is representing
himself. Pp. 176-179.
(c) The appearance of a pro se defendant's self-representation
will not be undermined by standby counsel's participation outside
the jury's presence. In this case, most of the incidents of which
respondent complains occurred when the jury was not in the
courtroom, and, while some of those incidents were regrettable,
counsel's participation fully satisfied the first limitation noted
above. Respondent was given ample opportunity to present his own
position to the court on every matter discussed, and all conflicts
between respondent and counsel were resolved in respondent's favor.
Pp. 179-181.
(d) It is when standby counsel participate in the jury's presence
that a defendant may legitimately claim that excessive involvement
by counsel will destroy the appearance that the defendant is acting
pro se. Nevertheless, a categorical bar on counsel's participation
is unnecessary. Here, where respondent's pro se efforts were
undermined primarily by his own changes of mind regarding counsel's
role, it is very difficult to determine how much of counsel's
participation was in fact contrary to respondent's desires. If a
defendant is given the opportunity and elects to have counsel appear
before the court or a jury, his complaints concerning counsel's
subsequent unsolicited participation lose much of their force. Once
a pro se defendant invites or agrees to any substantial
participation by counsel, subsequent appearances by counsel must be
presumed to be with the defendant's acquiescence, at least until the
defendant expressly and unambiguously renews his request that
standby counsel be silenced. Pp. 181-183.
(e) A defendant's Sixth Amendment rights are not violated when a
trial judge appoints standby counsel - even over the defendant's
objection - to relieve the judge of the need to explain and enforce
basic rules of courtroom protocol or to assist the defendant in
overcoming routine obstacles that stand in the way of his
achievement of his own clearly indicated goals. At respondent's
trial a significant part of standby counsel's participation involved
such basic procedures, and none interfered with respondent's control
over his defense or undermined his appearance before the jury in the
status of a pro se defendant. Pp. 183-185.
(f) Aside from standby counsel's participation that was either
approved by respondent or attendant to routine clerical or
procedural matters, counsel's unsolicited comments in front of the
jury were not substantial or frequent enough to have seriously
undermined respondent's
[465 U.S. 168, 170] appearance before the
jury in the status of representing himself. Pp. 185-187.
681 F.2d 266, reversed.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C. J., and POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. BLACKMUN, J.,
concurred in the result. WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in
which BRENNAN and MARSHALL, JJ., joined, post, p. 188.
Leslie A. Benitez, Assistant Attorney General of Texas, argued the
cause for petitioner. With her on the brief were Jim Mattox, Attorney
General, David R. Richards, Executive Assistant Attorney General, and
Nancy M. Simonson, Assistant Attorney General.
Craig Smyser, by appointment of the Court,
460 U.S. 1035 , argued the cause pro hac vice and filed a brief
for respondent. Respondent filed a brief pro se.
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
In Faretta v. California,
422 U.S. 806 (1975), this Court recognized a defendant's Sixth
Amendment right to conduct his own defense. The Court also held that a
trial court may appoint "standby counsel" to assist the pro se
defendant in his defense. Today we must decide what role standby
counsel who is present at trial over the defendant's objection may
play consistent with the protection of the defendant's Faretta rights.
I
Carl Edwin Wiggins was convicted of robbery and sentenced to life
imprisonment as a recidivist. His conviction was set aside because of
a defective indictment. When Wiggins was retired he was again
convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. Standby counsel were
appointed to assist Wiggins at both trials. Wiggins now challenges
counsel's participation in his second trial.
Prior to the first trial, a hearing was held on Wiggins' motion to
proceed pro se. The court granted the motion, Record 4a, but
simultaneously appointed two attorneys to act
[465 U.S. 168, 171]
as standby counsel. Wiggins initially objected to their
presence. Id., at 11a. Shortly thereafter, however, counsel asked
Wiggins how they should conduct themselves at trial, and Wiggins
expressly requested that they bring appropriate objections directly to
the attention of the court, without first consulting him. Id., at 37a.
After the trial, newly appointed counsel discovered that the original
indictment was defective, and a new trial was granted.
On April 16, 1973, about two months before the second trial began,
Wiggins filed a request for appointed counsel, stating that he wished
to rescind his earlier waiver of counsel. App. A-54 - A-55.
1 The next day Wiggins filled out and signed a form captioned
"Petition for Appointment of Counsel and Order Thereon."
2 The trial court appointed Benjamin Samples. About a month later
Wiggins filed an additional request for counsel.
3 Five days later Wiggins
[465 U.S. 168, 172] filled out another
appointment of counsel form, and the trial court appointed R. Norvell
Graham.
Wiggins' wishes respecting appointed counsel remained volatile as
his second trial approached. When pretrial proceedings began on June
4, 1973, Wiggins announced that he would be defending himself pro se;
he then firmly requested that counsel not be allowed to interfere with
Wiggins' presentations to the court. Record 8, 12, 39-40. Wiggins
reaffirmed his desire to proceed pro se on the following morning, June
5, and objected even to the court's insistence that counsel remain
available for consultation. Id., at 66-67. The trial began later that
day, and shortly thereafter Wiggins interrupted his cross-examination
of a witness to consult with Graham off the record. Id., at 201. Still
later, Wiggins expressly agreed to allow Graham to conduct voir dire
of another witness. Id., at 210.
Wiggins started the next day of trial, June 6, with a request that
the trial not proceed in Samples' absence from the courtroom. Id., at
255. Later that morning Wiggins requested that counsel not be allowed
to assist or interrupt, id., at 308, but a short while after Wiggins
interrupted his own cross-examination of a witness to confer with
Samples off the record. Id., at 310. When the trial reconvened in the
afternoon, Wiggins agreed to proceed in Samples' absence. Id., at 328.
After Samples returned, however, Wiggins again interrupted his own
cross-examination of a witness to confer with him. Id., at 333. Later
Wiggins insisted that counsel should not initiate private
consultations with him. Id., at 345-346. Before the end of the day
Wiggins once again found occasion to interrupt his own examination of
a witness to confer with Samples. Id., at 384.
On the following day, June 7, Wiggins agreed that Graham would make
Wiggins' opening statement to the jury. Id., at 486. On June 8,
Wiggins was once again willing to have the trial proceed in the
absence of one of his standby counsel.
[465 U.S. 168, 173] Id., at 546. Following
his conviction, Wiggins moved for a new trial. At the July 31 hearing
on Wiggins' motion, he denounced the services standby counsel had
provided. He insisted that they had unfairly interfered with his
presentation of his defense. Id., at 572b.
After exhausting direct appellate and state habeas review Wiggins
filed a petition for federal habeas corpus relief. He argued that
standby counsel's conduct deprived him of his right to present his own
defense, as guaranteed by Faretta. The District Court denied the
habeas petition, but the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
reversed. Wiggins v. Estelle, 681 F.2d 266, rehearing denied, 691 F.2d
213 (1982). The Court of Appeals held that Wiggins' Sixth Amendment
right of self-representation was violated by the unsolicited
participation of overzealous standby counsel:
"[T]he rule that we establish today is that court-appointed
standby counsel is `to be seen, but not heard.' By this we mean that
he is not to compete with the defendant or supersede his defense.
Rather, his presence is there for advisory purposes only, to be used
or not used as the defendant sees fit." 681 F.2d, at 273 (footnote
omitted).
We do not accept the Court of Appeals' rule, and reverse its
judgment.
II
A
In Faretta the Court considered the case of a criminal defendant
who was required to present his defense exclusively through counsel.
The Court held that an accused has a Sixth Amendment right to conduct
his own defense, provided only that he knowingly and intelligently
forgoes his right to counsel and that he is able and willing to abide
by rules of procedure and courtroom protocol. Faretta concluded that
"[u]nless the accused has acquiesced in [representation through
[465 U.S. 168, 174]
counsel], the defense presented is not the defense guaranteed
him by the Constitution, for, in a very real sense, it is not his
defense."
422 U.S., at 821 .
Faretta's holding was based on the longstanding recognition of a
right of self-representation in federal and most state courts, and on
the language, structure, and spirit of the Sixth Amendment. Under that
Amendment, it is the accused, not counsel, who must be "informed of
the nature and cause of the accusation," who has the right to confront
witnesses, and who must be accorded "compulsory process for obtaining
witnesses in his favor." The Counsel Clause itself, which permits the
accused "to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence," implies a
right in the defendant to conduct his own defense, with assistance at
what, after all, is his, not counsel's trial.
B
A defendant's right to self-representation plainly encompasses
certain specific rights to have his voice heard. The pro se defendant
must be allowed to control the organization and content of his own
defense, to make motions, to argue points of law, to participate in
voir dire, to question witnesses, and to address the court and the
jury at appropriate points in the trial. The record reveals that
Wiggins was in fact accorded all of these rights.
Before trial Wiggins moved the trial court to order preparation of
a transcript of the first trial. He, not standby counsel, then waived
receipt of the transcript and announced ready for trial. Record 7-11,
65-66. He filed and argued at least 12 pro se motions in pretrial
proceedings.
4 Wiggins [465 U.S.
168, 175] alone conducted the defense's voir dire of
prospective jurors
5 and made the opening statement for the defense to the jury. Id.,
at 347-348.
Wiggins filed numerous pro se motions in the course of the trial.
6 He cross-examined the prosecution's witnesses freely, id., at
26-30, 199-206, 224-226, 228-237, 269-286, 290-292, 296-301, 310,
319-326, 332-336, 434-447, 445-468, 532-534, and registered his own
objections, id., at 237, 238, 317, 318, 352, 353-359, 418-420, 450,
484, 485, 497, 502-503, 536. Throughout the trial Wiggins selected the
witnesses for the defense, id., at 47, 56, 60-61, 348, 368, 381, 383,
384, 393, 396, 398-399, 403, 408, 412, 413, 424, examined them, id.,
at 47-55, 349-351, 363-367, 368-373, 374-376, 380-381, 381-382,
383-384, 384-387, 399-401, 404-407, 408-412, 424-426, decided that
certain questions would not be asked by the defense, id., at 414,
449-450, and decided which witnesses would not be called, id., at 390,
415, 422. Against counsel's advice, Wiggins announced that the defense
rested. Id., at 413. Wiggins filed his own requested charges to the
jury, id., at 471-473, and made his own objections to the court's
suggested charge, id., at 473-478. He obtained the removal of one of
the court's proposed charges over counsel's express objection, id., at
478, approved the verdict form supplied to the jury, id., at 479, and
gave a closing argument to the jury, id., at 490-497. Wiggins elected
to go to the jury at the punishment phase of his trial, id., at 69,
and he argued his case to the jury at that stage as well, id., at
540-541. [465 U.S. 168,
176]
C
Wiggins' complaint is directed not at limits placed on his
participation in the trial, for there clearly were none. It is
directed instead at the allegedly inadequate limits placed on standby
counsel's participation. At trial Wiggins objected to the very fact
that counsel would remain available to assist him. Id., at 66-67.
Wiggins has abandoned that objection; he now contends only that his
Faretta right to present his defense pro se was impaired by the
distracting, intrusive, and unsolicited participation of counsel
throughout the trial.
III
Wiggins claims, and the Court of Appeals agreed, that the pro se
defendant may insist on presenting his own case wholly free from
interruption or other uninvited involvement by standby counsel.
Wiggins relies primarily on Faretta's sole reference to standby
counsel:
"Of course, a State may - even over objection by the accused -
appoint a `standby counsel' to aid the accused if and when the
accused requests help, and to be available to represent the accused
in the event that termination of the defendant's self-representation
is necessary. See United States v. Dougherty, 154 U.S. App. D.C. 76,
87-89, 473 F.2d 1113, 1124-1126."
422 U.S., at 835 , n. 46.
Wiggins contends that the "if and when" language defines the limits
on standby counsel's role. He argues that the Faretta right will be
eviscerated if counsel is allowed to argue with the defendant, make
motions to the court contrary to the defendant's wishes, and take
other steps not specifically approved by the defendant.
In our view, both Faretta's logic and its citation of the Dougherty
case indicate that no absolute bar on standby counsel's unsolicited
participation is appropriate or was intended. The right to appear pro
se exists to affirm the
[465 U.S. 168, 177] dignity and autonomy of the accused
and to allow the presentation of what may, at least occasionally, be
the accused's best possible defense. Both of these objectives can be
achieved without categorically silencing standby counsel.
In determining whether a defendant's Faretta rights have been
respected, the primary focus must be on whether the defendant had a
fair chance to present his case in his own way. Faretta itself dealt
with the defendant's affirmative right to participate, not with the
limits on standby counsel's additional involvement. The specific
rights to make his voice heard that Wiggins was plainly accorded, see
supra, at 174-175, form the core of a defendant's right of
self-representation.
We recognize, nonetheless, that the right to speak for oneself
entails more than the opportunity to add one's voice to a cacophony of
others. As Wiggins contends, the objectives underlying the right to
proceed pro se may be undermined by unsolicited and excessively
intrusive participation by standby counsel. In proceedings before a
jury the defendant may legitimately be concerned that multiple voices
"for the defense" will confuse the message the defendant wishes to
convey, thus defeating Faretta's objectives.
7 Accordingly, the Faretta right must impose some limits on the
extent of standby counsel's unsolicited participation.
8 [465 U.S. 168,
178]
First, the pro se defendant is entitled to preserve actual control
over the case he chooses to present to the jury. This is the core of
the Faretta right. If standby counsel's participation over the
defendant's objection effectively allows counsel to make or
substantially interfere with any significant tactical decisions, or to
control the questioning of witnesses, or to speak instead of the
defendant on any matter of importance, the Faretta right is eroded.
Second, participation by standby counsel without the defendant's
consent should not be allowed to destroy the jury's perception that
the defendant is representing himself.
9 The defendant's appearance in the status of one conducting his
own defense is important in a criminal trial, since the right to
appear pro se exists to affirm the accused's individual dignity and
autonomy. In related contexts the courts have recognized that a
defendant has a right to be present at all important stages of trial,
Snyder v. Massachusetts,
291 U.S. 97 (1934), that he may not normally be forced to appear
in court in shackles or prison garb, Estelle v. Williams,
425 U.S. 501, 504 -505 (1976), and that he has a right to present
testimony [465 U.S. 168,
179] in his own behalf, see Harris v. New York,
401 U.S. 222, 225 (1971); Brooks v. Tennessee,
406 U.S. 605, 612 (1972). Appearing before the jury in the status
of one who is defending himself may be equally important to the pro se
defendant. From the jury's perspective, the message conveyed by the
defense may depend as much on the messenger as on the message itself.
From the defendant's own point of view, the right to appear pro se can
lose much of its importance if only the lawyers in the courtroom know
that the right is being exercised.
IV
Participation by standby counsel outside the presence of the jury
engages only the first of these two limitations. A trial judge, who in
any event receives a defendant's original Faretta request and
supervises the protection of the right throughout the trial, must be
considered capable of differentiating the claims presented by a pro se
defendant from those presented by standby counsel. Cf. United States
v. Martinez, 597 F.2d 509, 510-511 (CA5), cert. denied,
444 U.S. 979 (1979); United States v. Penick, 496 F.2d 1105, 1108
(CA7), cert. denied,
419 U.S. 897 (1974); United States v. Reeves, 348 F.2d 469 (CA2
1965), cert. denied,
383 U.S. 929 (1966). Accordingly, the appearance of a pro se
defendant's self-representation will not be unacceptably undermined by
counsel's participation outside the presence of the jury.
Thus, Faretta rights are adequately vindicated in proceedings
outside the presence of the jury if the pro se defendant is allowed to
address the court freely on his own behalf and if disagreements
between counsel and the pro se defendant are resolved in the
defendant's favor whenever the matter is one that would normally be
left to the discretion of counsel.
10 [465 U.S. 168,
180]
Most of the incidents of which Wiggins complains occurred when the
jury was not in the courtroom. In the jury's absence Wiggins' two
standby counsel frequently explained to the trial judge their views
and points of disagreement with Wiggins. Counsel made motions,
dictated proposed strategies into the record,
11 registered objections to the prosecution's testimony, urged the
summoning of additional witnesses, and suggested questions that the
defendant should have asked of witnesses.
On several occasions Wiggins expressly adopted standby counsel's
initiatives. When counsel moved to quash a jury panel, for example,
Wiggins joined the motion. Record 81-82. Wiggins seconded counsel's
requests for a police report and photographs. Id., at 51-52, 54. At
least twice, counsel made a motion, the motion was denied, and Wiggins
then registered his exception to the denial.
12
On several other occasions Wiggins strongly opposed the initiatives
of counsel. He resisted counsel's suggestion that the trial be
postponed so that the transcript of his prior trial could be prepared,
13 and he waived counsel's right to a 10-day preparation period,
which counsel wished to invoke. Id., at 64-66. In the course of a
pretrial discussion concerning a discovery request Wiggins indignantly
demanded that counsel not participate further without invitation. Id.,
at 39-40. Later, Wiggins successfully opposed the inclusion in the
jury instructions of a charge that counsel felt should be included.
Id., at 476-478.
The most acrimonious exchange between Graham and Wiggins occurred
in the course of questioning a witness on voir dire. Wiggins suggests
this exchange was typical of counsel's
[465 U.S. 168, 181] overbearing conduct,
but he fails to place the incident in context. Wiggins had expressly
agreed to have Graham conduct the voir dire, id., at 210, but Wiggins
attempted to take over the questioning in midstream. Plainly
exasperated, Graham used profanity and curtly directed Wiggins to "[s]it
down."
14
Though several of these incidents are regrettable, we are satisfied
that counsel's participation outside the presence of the jury fully
satisfied the first standard we have outlined. Wiggins was given ample
opportunity to present his own position to the court on every matter
discussed. He was given time to think matters over, to explain his
problems and concerns informally, and to speak to the judge off the
record. Standby counsel participated actively, but for the most part
in an orderly manner. The one instance of overbearing conduct by
counsel was a direct result of Wiggins' own indecision as to who would
question the witness on voir dire. Wiggins was given abundant
opportunity to argue his contentions to the court.
Equally important, all conflicts between Wiggins and counsel were
resolved in Wiggins' favor. The trial judge repeatedly explained to
all concerned that Wiggins' strategic choices, not counsel's, would
prevail. Id., at 12-13, 65, 210, 223-224, 306-308, 341-342, 345-346,
414-415, 427, 430, 450, 477-478. Not every motion made by Wiggins was
granted, but in no instance was counsel's position adopted over
Wiggins' on a matter that would normally be left to the defense's
discretion.
V
Participation by standby counsel in the presence of the jury is
more problematic. It is here that the defendant may legitimately claim
that excessive involvement by counsel will destroy the appearance that
the defendant is acting pro se.
[465 U.S. 168, 182] This, in turn, may
erode the dignitary values that the right to self-representation is
intended to promote and may undercut the defendant's presentation to
the jury of his own most effective defense. Nonetheless, we believe
that a categorical bar on participation by standby counsel in the
presence of the jury is unnecessary.
A
In measuring standby counsel's involvement against the standards we
have described, it is important not to lose sight of the defendant's
own conduct. A defendant can waive his Faretta rights. Participation
by counsel with a pro se defendant's express approval is, of course,
constitutionally unobjectionable. A defendant's invitation to counsel
to participate in the trial obliterates any claim that the
participation in question deprived the defendant of control over his
own defense. Such participation also diminishes any general claim that
counsel unreasonably interfered with the defendant's right to appear
in the status of one defending himself.
Although this is self-evident, it is also easily overlooked. A
defendant like Wiggins, who vehemently objects at the beginning of
trial to standby counsel's very presence in the courtroom, may express
quite different views as the trial progresses. Even when he insists
that he is not waiving his Faretta rights, a pro se defendant's
solicitation of or acquiescence in certain types of participation by
counsel substantially undermines later protestations that counsel
interfered unacceptably.
The record in this case reveals that Wiggins' pro se efforts were
undermined primarily by his own, frequent changes of mind regarding
counsel's role. Early in the trial Wiggins insisted he wished to
proceed entirely without assistance, but shortly thereafter he
expressly agreed that counsel should question a witness on voir dire.
Wiggins objected vehemently to some of counsel's motions, but warmly
embraced others. Initially Wiggins objected to standby counsel's
presence; later he refused to allow the trial to proceed in
[465 U.S. 168, 183]
their absence; in the end he agreed that counsel would make a
closing statement for the defense. The only two long appearances by
counsel at Wiggins' trial, one before the jury and one outside its
presence, were both initiated with Wiggins' express approval. Record
210-223, 241-243; 486-489. In these circumstances it is very difficult
to determine how much of counsel's participation was in fact contrary
to Wiggins' desires of the moment.
Faretta does not require a trial judge to permit "hybrid"
representation of the type Wiggins was actually allowed. But if a
defendant is given the opportunity and elects to have counsel appear
before the court or jury, his complaints concerning counsel's
subsequent unsolicited participation lose much of their force. A
defendant does not have a constitutional right to choreograph special
appearances by counsel. Once a pro se defendant invites or agrees to
any substantial participation by counsel, subsequent appearances by
counsel must be presumed to be with the defendant's acquiescence, at
least until the defendant expressly and unambiguously renews his
request that standby counsel be silenced.
B
Faretta rights are also not infringed when standby counsel assists
the pro se defendant in overcoming routine procedural or evidentiary
obstacles to the completion of some specific task, such as introducing
evidence or objecting to testimony, that the defendant has clearly
shown he wishes to complete. Nor are they infringed when counsel
merely helps to ensure the defendant's compliance with basic rules of
courtroom protocol and procedure. In neither case is there any
significant interference with the defendant's actual control over the
presentation of his defense. The likelihood that the defendant's
appearance in the status of one defending himself will be eroded is
also slight, and in any event it is tolerable. A defendant does not
have a constitutional right to receive personal instruction from the
trial judge on courtroom procedure.
[465 U.S. 168, 184] Nor does the
Constitution require judges to take over chores for a pro se defendant
that would normally be attended to by trained counsel as a matter of
course. Faretta recognized as much. "The right of self-representation
is not a license to abuse the dignity of the courtroom. Neither is it
a license not to comply with relevant rules of procedural and
substantive law."
422 U.S., at 835 , n. 46.
Accordingly, we make explicit today what is already implicit in
Faretta: A defendant's Sixth Amendment rights are not violated when a
trial judge appoints standby counsel - even over the defendant's
objection - to relieve the judge of the need to explain and enforce
basic rules of courtroom protocol or to assist the defendant in
overcoming routine obstacles that stand in the way of the defendant's
achievement of his own clearly indicated goals. Participation by
counsel to steer a defendant through the basic procedures of trial is
permissible even in the unlikely event that it somewhat undermines the
pro se defendant's appearance of control over his own defense.
At Wiggins' trial a significant part of standby counsel's
participation both in and out of the jury's presence involved basic
mechanics of the type we have described - informing the court of the
whereabouts of witnesses, supplying Wiggins with a form needed to
elect to go to the jury at the punishment phase of trial, explaining
to Wiggins that he should not argue his case while questioning a
witness, and so on. See Record 9, 11-12, 45, 50, 69, 191, 206, 232,
251, 254, 255, 391, 393, 396, 404, 406, 471. When Wiggins attempted to
introduce a document into evidence, but failed to mark it for
identification or to lay a predicate for its introduction, counsel, at
the trial court's suggestion, questioned the witness to lay an
appropriate predicate, and Wiggins then resumed his examination. Id.,
at 293-296. Similarly, the trial judge repeatedly instructed Wiggins
to consult with counsel, not with the court, regarding the appropriate
procedure for summoning witnesses. Id., at 204-205, 207-208, 248, 272,
395, 396, 402. [465 U.S.
168, 185]
Notwithstanding Wiggins' several general objections to the presence
and participation of counsel, we find these aspects of counsel's
involvement irreproachable. None interfered with Wiggins' actual
control over his defense; none can reasonably be thought to have
undermined Wiggins' appearance before the jury in the status of a pro
se defendant.
C
Putting aside participation that was either approved by Wiggins or
attendant to routine clerical or procedural matters, counsel's
unsolicited comments in front of the jury were infrequent and for the
most part innocuous. On two occasions Graham interrupted a witness'
answer to a question put by Wiggins. Id., at 204, 287. The first
interruption was trivial. When the second was made the jury was
briefly excused and subsequently given a cautionary instruction as
requested by Graham. Wiggins made no objection. Standby counsel also
moved for a mistrial three times in the presence of the jury. Id., at
262, 421-422, 498-499. Each motion was in response to allegedly
prejudicial questions or comments by the prosecutor. Wiggins did not
comment on the first motion, but he opposed the following two. All
three motions were immediately denied by the trial court. Regrettably,
counsel used profanity to express his exasperation on the second
occasion.
15 Finally, counsel played an active
[465 U.S. 168, 186]
role at the punishment phase of the trial. The record
supplies no explanation for the sudden change in this regard. Wiggins
made no objection to counsel's participation in this phase of the
trial. We can only surmise that by then Wiggins had concluded that
appearing pro se was not in his best interests.
The statements made by counsel during the guilt phase of the trial,
in the presence of the jury and without Wiggins' express consent,
occupy only a small portion of the transcript. Most were of an
unobjectionable, mechanical sort. While standby counsel's
participation at Wiggins' trial should not serve as a model for future
trials, we believe that counsel's involvement fell short of infringing
on Wiggins' Faretta rights. Wiggins unquestionably maintained actual
control over the presentation of his own defense at all times.
We are also persuaded that Wiggins was allowed to appear before the
jury in the status of one defending himself. At the outset the trial
judge carefully explained to the jury that Wiggins would be appearing
pro se. Record 84. Wiggins, not counsel, examined prospective jurors
on voir dire, cross-examined the prosecution's witnesses, examined his
own witnesses, and made an opening statement for the defense. Wiggins
objected to the prosecutor's case at least as often as did counsel. If
Wiggins' closing statement to the jury had to compete with one made by
counsel, it was only because Wiggins agreed in advance to that
arrangement.
By contrast, counsel's interruptions of Wiggins or witnesses being
questioned by Wiggins in the presence of the jury were few and
perfunctory. Most of counsel's uninvited comments were directed at the
prosecutor.
16 Such interruptions
[465 U.S. 168, 187] present little threat
to a defendant's Faretta rights, at least when the defendant's view
regarding those objections has not been clearly articulated. On the
rare occasions that disagreements between counsel and Wiggins were
aired in the presence of the jury the trial judge consistently ruled
in Wiggins' favor. This was a pattern more likely to reinforce than to
detract from the appearance that Wiggins was controlling his own
defense.
17 The intrusions by counsel at Wiggins' trial were simply not
substantial or frequent enough to have seriously undermined Wiggins'
appearance before the jury in the status of one representing himself.
VI
Faretta affirmed the defendant's constitutional right to appear on
stage at his trial. We recognize that a pro se
[465 U.S. 168, 188]
defendant may wish to dance a solo, not a pas de deux.
Standby counsel must generally respect that preference. But counsel
need not be excluded altogether, especially when the participation is
outside the presence of the jury or is with the defendant's express or
tacit consent. The defendant in this case was allowed to make his own
appearances as he saw fit. In our judgment counsel's unsolicited
involvement was held within reasonable limits.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is therefore
JUSTICE BLACKMUN concurs in the result.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] Wiggins' letter to the trial judge stated: "I wish to
rescind my earlier request to waive court appointed assistance counsel
- and request that this honorable court appoint counsel to assist me.
"I would appreciate very much if the court would appoint the Honorable
Stewart J. Alexander who was previously appointed to assist on appeal,
before sentence was set aside. "And I apologize if I have caused an
inconvenience to the court." Record 584 (original emphasis).
[
Footnote 2 ] The petition read: "Now comes Carl Edwin Wiggins,
defendant in the above styled and numbered cause, and respectfully
petitions the Court to appoint counsel to represent him in said felony
cause and would show to the Court that he is too poor to employ
counsel." Id., at 586.
[
Footnote 3 ] This request read in pertinent part: "I have been
indicted four (4) times of the same offense . . . . "According to
Higgins v. State and Snow v. State, where prosecutions were dismissed
- and according to VACCP Art. 28.13, I should'nt [sic] be tried again.
"Will you please appoint counsel to cite authorities on this issue,
also, in favor of the state. I find only authorities indicating that
further prosecution is barred. None indicating other-wise [sic]." Id.,
at 623 (original emphasis).
[
Footnote 4 ] These included a motion for discovery, id., at 14, a
motion to set aside the indictment, id., at 16, a double jeopardy
claim, id., at 17-22, a motion in limine, a motion for special relief,
id., at 23-24, a motion to correct an offense report, id., at 31, a
motion for discovery of any exculpatory material in the prosecutor's
file, id., at 33, a motion to keep a marked document out of the sight
of the jury, id., at 42, a motion to sequester the jury, id., at
44-45, another motion in limine, id., at 57-58, a motion for a change
of [465 U.S. 168, 175]
venue (withdrawn by the defendant), id., at 59, a motion
for a speedy trial, id., at 60, a motion for a jury shuffle, id., at
67-68, and a motion for witness fees, id., at 69-70.
[
Footnote 5 ] Wiggins made an opening statement to the venire, id.,
at 101-103, and examined 33 individual venirepersons. Id., at 106-185.
[
Footnote 6 ] These included a motion for acquittal, a motion to
question a witness out of the presence of the jury, and a motion for
the appointment of an investigator. Id., at 342-344, 392-393, 394-395.
[
Footnote 7 ] A pro se defendant must generally accept any
unsolicited help or hindrance that may come from the judge who chooses
to call and question witnesses, from the prosecutor who faithfully
exercises his duty to present evidence favorable to the defense, from
the plural voices speaking "for the defense" in a trial of more than
one defendant, or from an amicus counsel appointed to assist the
court, see Brown v. United States, 105 U.S. App. D.C. 77, 83, 264 F.2d
363, 369 (1959) (Burger, J., concurring in part).
[
Footnote 8 ] Since the right of self-representation is a right
that when exercised usually increases the likelihood of a trial
outcome unfavorable to the defendant, its denial is not amenable to
"harmless error" analysis. The right is either respected or denied;
its deprivation cannot be harmless. As a corollary, however, a
defendant who exercises his right to appear pro se "cannot thereafter
complain that the quality of his own defense amounted to a denial of
`effective assistance of counsel.'" Faretta,
422 U.S., at 835 , n. 46. Moreover, the defendant's right to
proceed pro se [465 U.S.
168, 178] exists in the larger context of the criminal
trial designed to determine whether or not a defendant is guilty of
the offense with which he is charged. The trial judge may be required
to make numerous rulings reconciling the participation of standby
counsel with a pro se defendant's objection to that participation;
nothing in the nature of the Faretta right suggests that the usual
deference to "judgment calls" on these issues by the trial judge
should not obtain here as elsewhere.
[
Footnote 9 ] Faretta anticipated this second requirement. In its
footnote on standby counsel Faretta cited three pages of United States
v. Dougherty, 154 U.S. App. D.C. 76, 473 F.2d 1113 (1972), in which we
find this statement: "The utility of an amicus appointment is
dependent on explanation to and cooperation by [the] defendant, and on
understanding, too, that he may claim with some merit that his pro se
rights include his right to appear before the jury in the status of
one defending himself, and that this is defeated if a too conspicuous
role is played by an attorney, unless it clearly appears to the jury
that he does not have the status of defense counsel." Id., at 88, 473
F.2d, at 1125 (footnote omitted).
[
Footnote 10 ] Cf. ABA Standards For Criminal Justice 6-3.7 (2d ed.
1980) (standby counsel may "call the judge's attention to matters
favorable to the accused upon which the judge should rule on his or
her motion . . ."); Uniform Rule of Criminal Procedure 711 (1974)
(same); Mayberry v. Pennsylvania,
400 U.S. 455, 467 -468 (1971) (BURGER, C. J., concurring) (same).
[
Footnote 11 ] Record 344-345, 414-415, 427-428, 449-450, 478.
[
Footnote 12 ] See id., at 243, 246; 447, 449. On other occasions
Wiggins simply did not react to standby counsel's participation. See,
e. g., id., at 32.
[
Footnote 13 ] Id., at 7-9. Wiggins later came to regret the
unavailability of the transcript, and claimed that he had never waived
his right to receive it. Id., at 252-254.
[
Footnote 14 ] Id., at 215, 218, 223. Wiggins was given a full
opportunity to question the witness when Graham had finished. Id., at
224-226, 228-237.
[
Footnote 15 ] "MR. GRAHAM: Objection, Your Honor. The district
attorney is testifying. "THE COURT: Don't lead. "MR. GRAHAM: I ask the
Court to instruct the jury to disregard the remarks of counsel as not
being testimony in the case. "THE COURT: The Court will instruct the
jury to disregard the last statement made by Mr. Rodriguez. "MR.
GRAHAM: Notwithstanding the Court's instruction, I am sure it is so
prejudicial as to require a mistrial. "DEFENDANT: No, Your Honor. I
object to a mistrial. I object to counsel - "THE COURT: I denied the
motion for mistrial. Overruled. "MR. GRAHAM: Jesus Christ." Id., at
421-422.
[
Footnote 16 ] Graham registered about 15 objections during the
course of the prosecutor's questioning of witnesses and closing
argument. Id., at 196, 261-262, 301, 302, 304, 339-340, 420-421, 498,
501. These involved pedestrian matters such as hearsay, leading the
witness, calling for a conclusion, evidence not in the record, and so
on. All but one, id., at 339-340, were
[465 U.S. 168, 187] made without comment
from Wiggins, and most were sustained by the trial judge without
argument from the prosecutor. We note that at his first trial Wiggins,
when asked, agreed that standby counsel should make objections without
first consulting Wiggins. Id., at 37a. On several occasions at the
second trial Wiggins expressly joined counsel's objections or motions.
[
Footnote 17 ] It might be suggested that the very fact that the
trial was interrupted several times by standby counsel prevented
Wiggins from presenting his own defense effectively to the jury. This
line of argument does not withstand scrutiny here. By our count the
jury left the courtroom 15 times between the time when the indictment
was read and the time when the jury retired to deliberate on the
question of guilt. As best we can tell, four of these interruptions
were caused by standby counsel, id., at 287, 307, 341, 413, four by
Wiggins himself, id., at 356, 389, 393, 403, and seven by the court.
Id., at 207, 244, 327, 373, 392, 424. Likewise, we count 15
conferences, off-the-record but in the presence of the jury, between
Wiggins and his counsel. Eight appear to have been initiated by
Wiggins, id., at 191, 201, 333, 340, 384, 406 (two), 450, and four by
standby counsel, id., at 340, 407, 415, 469; we cannot determine who
initiated the remaining three, id., at 280, 337, 412. Certainly the
trial judge expressed his view that Wiggins himself was responsible
for most of the delays and interruptions. Id., at 397. In these
circumstances, the interruptions caused by standby counsel did not
significantly detract from Wiggins' control, or appearance of control,
over his pro se defense.
JUSTICE WHITE, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE MARSHALL join,
dissenting.
Just as the Sixth Amendment accords an accused a fundamental right
to the assistance of counsel, so also, this Court has recognized, it
embodies "the correlative right to dispense with a lawyer's help,"
Adams v. United States ex rel. McCann,
317 U.S. 269, 279 (1942), and to manage one's own defense. Faretta
v. California,
422 U.S. 806 (1975). It is, I believe, "undeniable that in most
criminal prosecutions defendants could better defend with counsel's
guidance than by their own unskilled efforts." Id., at 834.
Nevertheless, "Faretta establishes that the right to counsel is more
than a right to have one's case presented competently and
effectively." Jones v. Barnes,
463 U.S. 745, 759 (1983) (BRENNAN, J., dissenting). "The right to
defend is personal," Faretta,
422 U.S., at 834 , and the text and structure of the Sixth
Amendment, as well as the common-law jurisprudence from which the
Amendment emerged, comport with "a nearly universal conviction, on the
part of our people as well as our courts, that forcing a lawyer upon
an unwilling defendant is contrary to his basic right to defend
himself if he truly wants to do so." Id., at 817. Thus, an accused who
knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily elects to do so is
constitutionally entitled to refuse the services of a
[465 U.S. 168, 189]
government-appointed attorney and to develop and present his
own defense. Id., at 835-836.
I
After granting Wiggins' request that he be allowed to represent
himself, the trial court designated his two appointed attorneys as
standby counsel and made it clear that they served in a purely
advisory capacity. One of the attorneys soon began to assume a more
active role in the proceedings, and Wiggins protested that counsel's
unsolicited participation was frustrating the conduct of his defense.
The trial court informed Wiggins that he would receive counsel's aid
whether he wanted it or not,
1 and it refused to instruct standby counsel not to volunteer
their assistance without a request from Wiggins.
2 [465 U.S. 168,
190]
Wiggins, on his own, made numerous pretrial motions, directly
examined his own witnesses, cross-examined the State's witnesses, and
attempted to argue his case to the jury
[465 U.S. 168, 191]
at both stages of the bifurcated trial. But the trial did not
go smoothly, for standby counsel "continuously participated in the
proceedings, both in and outside the presence of the jury." Wiggins v.
Estelle, 681 F.2d 266, 269-270, rehearing denied, 691 F.2d 213 (CA5
1982). In addition to making objections and motions too numerous to
cite, counsel argued with Wiggins, moved for a mistrial against his
wishes at several points during the trial, and twice cursed, once in
the presence of the jury.
Although petitioner characterizes counsel's participation as
"limited" and "intermittent," nothing could be further from the truth.
Standby counsel intervened in a substantial manner without Wiggins'
permission well over 50 times during the course of the 3-day trial;
many of these interruptions precipitated direct conflicts between
Wiggins and counsel, often in the presence of the jury. See App. A-3 -
A-54. Although the trial court appears to have resolved the conflicts
calling for a ruling in Wiggins' favor, their mere existence disrupted
the proceedings and turned the trial into an ordeal through which the
jury was required to suffer. See, e. g., id., at A-29; Record 423. At
several points during the trial, moreover, counsel blatantly
interfered with Wiggins' attempt to present his defense in a manner
not calling for a ruling from the bench, see, e. g., App. A-20, and we
of course have no way of knowing the extent to which Wiggins' defense
was subtly undermined or adversely affected by counsel's extensive
unsolicited participation.
The Court of Appeals had little trouble concluding that counsel's
conduct, expressly and tacitly approved by the trial court, prevented
Wiggins from conducting his own defense. Although the Court of Appeals
recognized that trial courts are empowered to appoint standby counsel
for pro se defendants, it declared that "court-appointed standby
counsel is `to be seen, but not heard.'" 681 F.2d, at 273. Standby
counsel, the Fifth Circuit made clear, "is not to compete with the
defendant or supersede his defense. Rather, his presence
[465 U.S. 168, 192]
is . . . for advisory purposes only, to be used or not used
as the defendant sees fit." Ibid. (footnotes omitted).
The court recognized that in some cases counsel's interjections
will be "few and innocuous"; reversal is not necessary "every time
overzealous counsel, acting in the best interests of his client,
volunteer[s] his aid without prior permission." Id., at 274. But the
continuous and substantial intervention of standby counsel, despite
Wiggins' repeated demands that he play a passive role, could not have
had "anything but a negative impact on the jury. It also destroyed
Wiggins' own perception that he was conducting his defense." Id., at
275 (emphasis in original). The Court of Appeals thus held that the
State had failed to demonstrate that Wiggins had not been prejudiced
by counsel's participation and that he was entitled to relief.
Disagreeing with the Court in several respects, I would affirm the
judgment of the Court of Appeals.
II
The Court holds that the seen-but-not-heard standard used by the
Court of Appeals in determining whether standby counsel improperly
encroached on Wiggins' right of self-representation is too rigid and
too restrictive on the conduct of standby counsel. As indicated above,
however, the Court of Appeals would not hold that every instance of
volunteered assistance or even every series of such instances would
violate a defendant's rights. Nor, as I understand it, would the Court
of Appeals' holding prevent a trial judge from directing a defendant
to consult with standby counsel where necessary for the proper conduct
of the trial or from insisting that a defendant agree to some ground
rules with respect to when standby counsel could inject himself into
the trial. I agree that the trial judge himself should not be burdened
with educating the defendant in trial procedure and that he should be
able to insist that the defendant learn what he needs to know
[465 U.S. 168, 193]
from standby counsel. The judgment below is not to the
contrary. In my view, the Court of Appeals announced a proper
standard, one that is wholly consistent with Faretta's ruling that "a
State may - even over objection by the accused - appoint a `standby
counsel' to aid the accused if and when the accused requests help,"
Faretta v. California,
422 U.S., at 835 , n. 46, and applied it in an acceptable way. In
any event, it seems to me that the Court proffers a poor substitute
for the approach of the Court of Appeals.
III
As the Court observes, ante, at 173, Faretta presented a situation
in which the trial court wholly denied a defendant's request to
proceed pro se and required him to address the State's charges only
through his appointed attorney. Wiggins, unlike Faretta, was allowed
to proceed pro se and took an active role in his trial. The Court
concludes, on the basis of its examination of the record, that Wiggins
was afforded "a fair chance to present his case in his own way," ante,
at 177, and that "counsel's unsolicited involvement was held within
reasonable limits," ante, at 188. It arrives at this conclusion by
applying a two-part test that, in my judgment, provides little or no
guidance for counsel and trial judges, imposes difficult, if not
impossible, burdens on appellate courts, and undoubtedly will lead to
the swift erosion of defendants' constitutional right to proceed pro
se.
Under the Court's new test, it is necessary to determine whether
the pro se defendant retained "actual control over the case he [chose]
to present to the jury," ante, at 178, and whether standby counsel's
participation "destroy[ed] the jury's perception that the defendant
[was] representing himself," ibid. Although this test purports to
protect all of the values underlying our holding in Faretta, it is
unclear whether it can achieve this result.
As long as the pro se defendant is allowed his say, the first prong
of the Court's test accords standby counsel at a bench
[465 U.S. 168, 194]
trial or any proceeding outside the presence of a jury
virtually untrammeled discretion to present any factual or legal
argument to which the defendant does not object. The limits placed on
counsel's participation in this context by the "actual control" test
are more apparent than real. First, counsel may not "make or
substantially interfere with any significant tactical decisions."
Ibid. Unless counsel directly overrides a defendant's strategy in the
presence of the judge, however, it is apparent that courts will be
almost wholly incapable of assessing the subtle and not-so-subtle
effects of counsel's participation on the defense. Second, the Court
suggests that conflicts between the pro se defendant and standby
counsel on "matter[s] that would normally be left to the defense's
discretion," ante, at 181, will be resolved in the defendant's favor.
But many disagreements will not produce direct conflicts requiring a
trial court to choose one position over another. Under the Court's
opinion, the burden apparently will fall on the pro se defendant to
comprehend counsel's submissions and to create conflicts for the trial
court to resolve. If applied this way, the Court's test surely will
prove incapable of safeguarding the interest in individual autonomy
from which the Faretta right derives.
Although the Court is more solicitous of a pro se defendant's
interests when standby counsel intervenes before a jury, the test's
second prong suffers from similar shortcomings. To the extent that
trial and appellate courts can discern the point at which counsel's
unsolicited participation substantially undermines a pro se
defendant's appearance before the jury, a matter about which I harbor
substantial doubts, their decisions will, to a certain extent, "affirm
the accused's individual dignity and autonomy." Ante, at 178. But they
will do so incompletely, for in focusing on how the jury views the
defendant, the majority opinion ignores Faretta's emphasis on the
defendant's own perception of the criminal justice system, Faretta v.
California, supra, at 834, and implies that the Court actually adheres
to the result-oriented harmless-error standard it purports to reject.
Ante, at 177-178, n. 8.
[465 U.S. 168, 195]
As a guide for standby counsel and lower courts, moreover, the
Court's two-part test is clearly deficient. Instead of encouraging
counsel to accept a limited role, the Court plainly invites them to
participate despite their clients' contrary instructions until the
clients renew their objections and trial courts draw the line. Trial
courts required to rule on pro se defendants' objections to counsel's
intervention also are left at sea. They clearly must prevent standby
counsel from overtly muzzling their pro se clients and resolve certain
conflicts in defendants' favor. But the Court's opinion places few, if
any, other clear limits on counsel's uninvited participation; instead
it requires trial courts to make numerous subjective judgments
concerning the effect of counsel's actions on defendants' Faretta
rights. Because trial courts generally will consider only isolated
actions of standby counsel expressly challenged by pro se defendants,
only appellate courts may be in a position to form impressions on the
basis of the entire trial. These courts, however, also will suffer
from the lack of clear standards and from their inability or
unwillingness to make the factual inquiries necessitated by the
Court's two-part test.
In short, I believe that the Court's test is unworkable and
insufficiently protective of the fundamental interests we recognized
in Faretta.
IV
The inappropriateness of the Court's standard is made manifest by
the Court's conclusion that the conduct of standby counsel in this
case passes muster under that standard. In frequently and grievously
exceeding the proper role of standby counsel, the more active of
Wiggins' appointed attorneys distracted Wiggins and usurped his
prerogatives,
3 [465 U.S. 168,
196] altered the tenor of the defense, disrupted the
trial,
4 undermined Wiggins' perception that he controlled his own fate,
Faretta v. California,
422 U.S., at 834 , induced a belief - most assuredly unfounded,
but sincerely held nevertheless - that "the law contrive[d] against
him," ibid.; see App. A-78 - A-81; Record 679, 700-701, 716-717, and
undoubtedly reduced Wiggins' credibility and prejudiced him in the
eyes of the jury. In allowing such intervention to continue despite
Wiggins' repeated requests that it cease, the trial court clearly
denied Wiggins' right of self-representation. The right to present and
control one's own defense means little indeed if one's "standby"
attorneys remain free to take any action they choose, whether
consistent with the desired defense or inimical to it, at any point
during the trial. In short, whatever advantage or satisfaction Wiggins
might have hoped to derive from self-representation, see, e. g., ABA
Standards for Criminal Justice 6-3.6(a) (2d ed. 1980), was surely
nullified by the trial court's tolerance of counsel's conduct.
The Court reaches a different conclusion by pinning the blame for
the interference with the right to proceed pro se on Wiggins himself
and by dissecting counsel's activities into discrete categories and
failing to consider their overall impact. These tactics, of course,
both required the Court to do its own factfinding, a function normally
left for district courts. Neither approach can withstand scrutiny.
Particularly [465 U.S.
168, 197] when the trial court has expressly refused to
order standby counsel to serve in a purely advisory capacity, a pro se
defendant cannot reasonably be expected to object to counsel's every
action. Not only would the trial court's initial decision tend to
impress upon the defendant the futility of continuing objections, but
also repeated objections could destroy the impression the defendant
seeks to convey to the jury. Accordingly, a defendant's acquiescence
in a violation of his Faretta right should not immunize that violation
from judicial review. Similarly, the fact that a pro se defendant,
with the trial court's approval, has authorized standby counsel to
perform a discrete representational function should not give rise to a
presumption that the defendant also has sanctioned subsequent
interference in the conduct of the trial. In any event, the most
glaring intrusions by counsel occurred without Wiggins' blessing.
5
Considered in isolation, many types of interference by standby
counsel in a pro se defense will likely appear inconsequential. The
Court's desire to compartmentalize counsel's actions, while
understandable, has, in my view, led it to ignore the cumulative
effect of counsel's frequent participation on Wiggins' right to defend
himself. To the extent that the Court rests on the proposition that
not every transgression of standby counsel constitutes reversible
error, I have no quarrel with its reasoning. A trial court's tolerance
of isolated and innocuous participation by standby counsel could
perhaps be characterized - in line with the Court of Appeals' holding
- as harmless constitutional error; one also could conclude that such
participation simply does not rise to the level of a constitutional
violation. The second formulation is
[465 U.S. 168, 198] clearly preferable,
6 but it is unnecessary to choose between them to resolve this
case since Wiggins should prevail under either view.
V
It also seems to me that if a standard different from that applied
by the Court of Appeals is to govern this case, the
[465 U.S. 168, 199]
Court should be content with announcing it and remanding to
the Court of Appeals for reconsideration in light of that standard,
rather than itself undertaking to apply the new standard in the first
instance. That course would more comport with the proper roles and
functions of both this Court and the courts of appeals.
With all due respect, I dissent and would affirm the judgment of
the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 1 ] "DEFENDANT: Your Honor, I would like to defend
myself. I would appreciate it, sir if you would ask this man to let me
defend myself. "MR. GRAHAM: Certainly. Help yourself. "DEFENDANT: I
would be grateful. I have not solicited his assistance, Your Honor,
and I don't want it. "THE COURT: You are going to get help and/or
assistance from him because you are obviously not a lawyer.
"DEFENDANT: Yes sir. I am not a lawyer. "THE COURT: And this trial, if
we do go into it, is going to be conducted according to the rules of
law. "DEFENDANT: Yes sir. "THE COURT: And there might be an occasion
when this Court is going to require that you consult with them as to
what the proper procedure may be. "DEFENDANT: Yes sir. "THE COURT: You
will have every right made available to you under the law, as this
Court is able to determine. "DEFENDANT: I appreciate that, Your Honor,
but for assistant counsel to initiate something that the defendant
does not want, I would like to consult the attorneys for advice. I
will appreciate that, but for counsels [sic] to initiate something
that is contrary to the defendant's defense, well, then, I couldn't
appreciate that." App. A-8 - A-9.
[
Footnote 2 ] "THE COURT: You are waiving the ten days as far as
Mr. Graham is concerned? "THE DEFENDANT: Yes, Your Honor.
[465 U.S. 168, 190]
"THE COURT: The basis of that is that you expect to be an
attorney for yourself pro se? "DEFENDANT: Yes, Your Honor. In fact,
not only that, I would like to waive his assistance, if I may. "THE
COURT: The Court is not going to relieve you of that. Now, you can use
it or not use it. It's available to you in this case. "DEFENDANT: Yes
sir, but I would ask the court to ask Mr. Graham not to take the
initiative to interfere with the defendant here, if I may do that?
"THE COURT: Well - "DEFENDANT: I mean, if I want Mr. Graham's help I
will ask for it and appreciate it if he wouldn't volunteer without me
asking for it. "THE COURT: Well, Mr. Graham is a competent attorney
and he has much experience in this type of thing and I am sure what he
is trying to do is what he thinks is best for you. I am not going to
order him to do or not to do anything. If some problem or situation
arises, I will act on it at that time. I am not going to order him not
to. "DEFENDANT: Your Honor, do I understand that the Court is forcing
the services of Mr. Graham on the defendant? "THE COURT: His
availability, yes. "DEFENDANT: May I except to that, Your Honor?" Id.,
at A-13 - A-14. After numerous disagreements between Wiggins and
counsel, Wiggins was again moved to request the assistance of the
trial court: "DEFENDANT: May I say it is peculiar to me, Your Honor
and I would really appreciate it if I could . . . conduct my defense
without the assistance and interruptions of counsel, with all respect,
Mr. Graham. "THE COURT: All right. "MR. GRAHAM: I will sit third chair
from now on. I will move back one notch. "THE COURT: I am not going to
order you Mr. Graham, because I know you are competent counsel, but
let me suggest to you that unless he consults with you - you do your
own thing anyway, but don't object or don't ask questions unless and
until the Court requests that you consult with him because he doesn't
know the proper way to do something." Id., at A-30 - A-31. See also
Record 345-346. Notwithstanding this admonition, counsel continued to
act of his own accord and to disrupt the presentation of Wiggins'
defense throughout the trial.
[
Footnote 3 ] As has been cogently observed in a related context:
"[N]umerous strategic and tactical decisions must be made in the
course of a criminal trial, many of which are made in circumstances
that do not allow extended, if any, consultation. Every experienced
advocate can recall the disconcerting experience of trying to conduct
the examination of a witness
[465 U.S. 168, 196] or follow opposing
arguments or the judge's charge while the client `plucks at the
attorney's sleeve' offering gratuitous suggestions." ABA Standards for
Criminal Justice 4-5.2 (2d ed. 1980).
[
Footnote 4 ] Among other things, standby counsel's actions created
a need for numerous conferences out of the hearing of the jury. The
disruptive, vexatious, and possibly prejudicial effects of repeated
bench conferences have long been recognized, id., 15-3.9, and indeed
were expressly acknowledged by the trial court. See, e. g., Record
423. The Court's attempt to attribute many of these interruptions
solely to Wiggins' conduct is unpersuasive.
[
Footnote 5 ] Although the Court attributes counsel's extensive
participation in the penalty phase of the trial to a conclusion by
Wiggins that appearing pro se was not in his best interests, an
equally plausible assumption is that Wiggins simply gave up his
attempted self-representation as a result of the trial court's
approval of counsel's repeated interruptions in the guilt phase.
[
Footnote 6 ] "The nature of the right to defend pro se renders the
traditional harmless error doctrine peculiarly inapposite. Unlike
other constitutional rights, the right to represent oneself is not
`result-oriented.' The normal operation of the harmless error doctrine
is in cases where the challenged error concerns a right accorded the
defendant to facilitate his defense or to insulate him from suspect
evidence. . . . By contrast, we recognize the defendant's right to
defend pro se not primarily out of the belief that he thereby stands a
better chance of winning his case, but rather out of deference to the
axiomatic notion that each person is ultimately responsible for
choosing his own fate, including his position before the law. A
defendant has the moral right to stand alone in his hour of trial and
to embrace the consequences of that course of action." Chapman v.
United States, 553 F.2d 886, 891 (CA5 1977) (footnote omitted). See
Moreno v. Estelle, 717 F.2d 171, 173, n. 1 (CA5 1983); Bittaker v.
Enomoto, 587 F.2d 400, 402-403 (CA9 1978), cert. denied,
441 U.S. 913 (1979); United States v. Dougherty, 154 U.S. App.
D.C. 76, 90-93, 473 F.2d 1113, 1127-1130 (1972); United States v.
Plattner, 330 F.2d 271, 273 (CA2 1964); People v. Tyner, 76 Cal. App.
3d 352, 356, 143 Cal. Rptr. 52, 54 (1977). But see People v. Sharp, 7
Cal. 3d 448, 462-463, 499 P.2d 489, 498 (1972), cert. denied,
410 U.S. 944 (1973); Burney v. State, 244 Ga. 33, 37, 257 S. E. 2d
543, 547, cert. denied,
444 U.S. 970 (1979); State v. Kirby, 198 Neb. 646, 648-649, 254 N.
W. 2d 424, 426 (1977). See also Walker v. Loggins, 608 F.2d 731, 736
(CA9 1979) (Carter, J., dissenting). As is the case when the trial
court completely denies a defendant's right of self-representation,
application of the result-oriented harmless-error standard to cases
like this one, where the defendant was allowed to proceed pro se but
the conduct of his appointed standby counsel inhibited his ability to
do so, would result in the denigration of the right. If counsel's
interference can be characterized as de minimis, it is more consistent
with the nature of the right of self-representation to conclude that
no violation occurred than to say that the violation was harmless
constitutional error. If, as is the case here, counsel acted with
substantial autonomy and significantly interfered with the pro se
defendant's presentation of his defense, reversal should follow
automatically without any inquiry into the question whether the
constitutional violation likely affected the outcome of the trial.
[465 U.S. 168, 200]


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