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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
PATTON v. YOUNT, 467 U.S. 1025 (1984)
467 U.S. 1025
PATTON ET AL. v. YOUNT
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
No. 83-95.
Argued February 28, 1984
Decided June 26, 1984
After a jury trial in a Pennsylvania state court in 1966,
respondent was convicted of first-degree murder and rape, and was
sentenced to life imprisonment. However, on direct appeal the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court held that the police had violated
respondent's constitutional rights in securing confessions that had
been admitted in evidence, and remanded the case for a new trial.
Before and during an extensive voir dire examination of potential
jurors at the second trial in 1970, respondent moved for a change of
venue, arguing that publicity concerning the case had resulted in
dissemination of prejudicial information that could not be eradicated
from the potential jurors' minds. The trial court denied the motions,
and respondent was convicted again of first-degree murder. He was
resentenced to life imprisonment, and the trial court denied a motion
for a new trial, finding that practically no publicity had been given
to the case between the two trials, that little public interest was
shown during the second trial, and that the jury was without bias. The
Pennsylvania Supreme Court affirmed the conviction and the trial
court's findings. Respondent then sought habeas corpus relief in
Federal District Court, claiming that his conviction had been obtained
in violation of his right under the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to
a fair trial by an impartial jury. Upholding the state trial court's
view that the jury was impartial, the District Court denied relief,
but the Court of Appeals reversed. Relying primarily on Irvin v. Dowd,
366 U.S. 717 , the court found that pretrial publicity had made a
fair trial impossible in the county.
Held:
1. The voir dire testimony and the record of publicity do not
reveal the kind of "wave of public passion" that would have made a
fair trial unlikely by the empaneled jury as a whole. Although Irvin
v. Dowd, supra, held that adverse publicity can create such a
presumption of prejudice in a community that the jurors' claims that
they can be impartial should not be believed, it also recognized
that the trial court's findings of impartiality may be overturned
only for "manifest error." In this case, the extensive adverse
publicity and the community's sense of outrage were at their height
prior to respondent's first trial. The record shows that prejudicial
publicity was greatly diminished and community sentiment
[467 U.S. 1025, 1026]
had softened when the jury for the second trial was
selected four years later. Thus the trial court did not commit
manifest error in finding that the jury as a whole was impartial.
Potential jurors who had retained fixed opinions as to respondent's
guilt were disqualified, and the fact that the great majority of
veniremen "remembered the case," without more, is essentially
irrelevant. The relevant question is whether the jurors at
respondent's second trial had such fixed opinions that they could
not judge impartially respondent's guilt. The passage of time
between the first and second trials clearly rebutted any presumption
of partiality or prejudice that existed at the time of the initial
trial. Pp. 1031-1035.
2. There is no merit in respondent's argument that one of the
selected jurors, as well as the two alternates, had been erroneously
seated over his challenges for cause. The ambiguity in the testimony
of the cited jurors was insufficient to overcome the presumption of
correctness, under 28 U.S.C. 2254(d), owed to the trial court's
findings. The question of an individual juror's partiality is
plainly one of historical fact, and there is fair support in the
record for the state courts' conclusion that the jurors here would
be impartial. Pp. 1036-1040.
710 F.2d 956, reversed.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER, C.
J., and WHITE, BLACKMUN, REHNQUIST, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined.
STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN, J., joined,
post, p. 1040. MARSHALL, J., took no part in the decision of the case.
F. Cortez Bell III argued the cause for petitioners. With him on
the brief was Thomas F. Morgan.
George E. Schumacher, by appointment of the Court,
464 U.S. 980 , argued the cause for respondent. With him on the
brief were Thomas S. White and James V. Wade.
JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case brings before us a claim that pretrial publicity so
infected a state criminal trial as to deny the defendant his Sixth
Amendment right to an "impartial jury."
I
On April 28, 1966, the body of Pamela Rimer, an 18-year-old high
school student, was found in a wooded area near her home in
Luthersburg, Clearfield County, Pa. There were
[467 U.S. 1025, 1027]
numerous wounds about her head and cuts on her throat and
neck. An autopsy revealed that she died of strangulation when blood
from her wounds was drawn into her lungs. The autopsy showed no
indication that she had been sexually assaulted.
At about 5:45 the following morning, respondent Yount appeared at
the State Police Substation in nearby DuBois. Yount, who had been the
victim's high school mathematics teacher, proceeded to give the police
oral and written confessions to the murder. The police refused to
release the confession to the press, and it was not published until
after it was read at Yount's arraignment three days later. Record, Ex.
P-1-a, P-1-d. At his trial in 1966, the confessions were admitted into
evidence. Yount took the stand and claimed temporary insanity. The
jury convicted him of first-degree murder and rape, and he was
sentenced to life imprisonment. On direct appeal the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court determined that under Miranda v. Arizona,
384 U.S. 436 (1966), police had given Yount inadequate notice of
his right to an attorney prior to his confession. The court remanded
for a new trial. Commonwealth v. Yount, 435 Pa. 276, 256 A. 2d 464
(1969), cert. denied,
397 U.S. 925 (1970).
Prior to the second trial in 1970, the trial court ordered
suppression of Yount's written confessions and that portion of the
oral confession that was obtained after he was legally in custody. The
prosecution dismissed the rape charge. There followed an extensive
voir dire that is now at the heart of this case. Jury selection began
on November 4, 1970, and took 10 days, 7 jury panels, 292 veniremen,
and 1,186 pages of testimony. Yount moved for a change of venue
before, and several times during, the voir dire. He argued that the
widespread dissemination of prejudicial information could not be
eradicated from the minds of potential jurors, and cited in support
the difficulty of the voir dire and numerous newspaper and other
articles about the case. The motions were denied. The trial court
noted that the articles merely reported
[467 U.S. 1025, 1028]
events without editorial comment; that the length of the
voir dire resulted in part from the court's leniency in allowing
examinations and challenges of the jurors; that "almost all, if not
all," the jurors seated had "no prior or present fixed opinion"; and
that there had been "little, if any, talk in public" between the two
trials. The court also observed that the voir dire of the second trial
had been sparsely attended.
Ultimately, 12 jurors and 2 alternates were seated. At the second
trial, Yount did not take the stand and did not claim temporary
insanity. Instead he relied upon cross-examination and character
witnesses in an attempt to undermine the State's proof of his intent.
The jury convicted him again of first-degree murder, and he was
resentenced to life imprisonment. The trial court denied a motion for
a new trial, finding that practically no publicity had been given to
the case between the two trials, and that little public interest was
shown during the second trial. App. 268a. In addition, the court
concluded that the jury was without bias. The Pennsylvania Supreme
Court affirmed the conviction and the trial court's findings.
Commonwealth v. Yount, 455 Pa. 303, 311-314, 314 A. 2d 242, 247-248
(1974).
In January 1981, Yount filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus
in United States District Court. He claimed, inter alia, that his
conviction had been obtained in violation of his Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendment right to a fair trial by an impartial jury. The case was
assigned to a Magistrate, who conducted a hearing and recommended that
the petition be granted. The District Court rejected the Magistrate's
recommendation. 537 F. Supp. 873 (WD Pa. 1982). It held that the
pretrial publicity was not vicious, excessive, nor officially
sponsored, and that the jurors were able to set aside any preconceived
notions of guilt. It noted that the percentage of jurors excused for
cause was "not remarkable to anyone familiar with the difficulty in
selecting a homicide jury in Pennsylvania." Id., at 882. In addition,
the court reviewed [467
U.S. 1025, 1029] the instances in which the state trial
court had denied a challenge for cause, and upheld the trial court's
view that the jury was impartial.
The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit reversed. 710 F.2d 956
(1983). The court relied primarily on the analysis set out in Irvin v.
Dowd,
366 U.S. 717 (1961), and found that pretrial publicity had made a
fair trial impossible in Clearfield County. It independently examined
the nature of the publicity surrounding the second trial, the
testimony at voir dire of the venire as a whole, and the voir dire
testimony of the jurors eventually seated. The publicity revealed
Yount's prior conviction for murder, his confession, and his prior
plea of temporary insanity, information not admitted into evidence at
trial.
1 The voir dire showed that all but 2 of 163 veniremen questioned
about the case
2 had heard of it, and that, 126, or 77%, admitted they would
carry an opinion into the jury box. This was a higher percentage than
in Irvin, where 62% of the 430 veniremen were dismissed for cause
because they had fixed opinions concerning the petitioner's guilt.
Finally, the Court of Appeals found that 8 of the 14 jurors and
alternates actually seated admitted that at
[467 U.S. 1025, 1030]
some time they had formed an opinion as to Yount's guilt.
3 The court thought that many of the jurors had given equivocal
responses when asked whether they could set aside these opinions, and
that one juror, a Mr. Hrin, and both alternates would have required
evidence to overcome their beliefs. The court concluded that "despite
their assurances of impartiality, the jurors could not set aside their
opinions and render a verdict based solely on the evidence presented."
710 F.2d, at 972.
4
Judge Garth concurred in the judgment. He declined to join the
court's view that actual prejudice on the part of the jury might be
inferred from pretrial publicity and the answers at voir dire of
veniremen not selected for the jury. He wrote that "[a] thorough and
skillfully conducted voir dire should be adequate to identify juror
bias, even in a community saturated with publicity adverse to the
defendant." Id., at 979.
5 Judge Garth nevertheless concurred because in his view juror
Hrin stated at voir dire that he would have required evidence to
change his mind about Yount's
[467 U.S. 1025, 1031] guilt. This stripped
the defendant of the presumption of innocence.
6
We granted certiorari,
464 U.S. 913 (1983), to consider, in the context of this case, the
problem of pervasive media publicity that now arises so frequently in
the trial of sensational criminal cases. We reverse the judgment of
the Court of Appeals.
II
As noted, the Court of Appeals rested its decision that the jury
was not impartial on this Court's decision in Irvin v. Dowd, supra.
That decision, a leading one at the time, held that adverse pretrial
publicity can create such a presumption of prejudice in a community
that the jurors' claims that they can be impartial should not be
believed. The Court in Irvin reviewed a number of factors in
determining whether the totality of the circumstances raised such a
presumption. The Court noted, however, that the trial court's findings
of impartiality might be overturned only for "manifest error."
366 U.S., at 723 . The Court of Appeals in this case did not
address this aspect of the Irvin decision.
7 Moreover, the
[467 U.S. 1025, 1032] court below, in concentrating on
the factors discussed at length in Irvin, failed to give adequate
weight to other significant circumstances in this case. In Irvin, the
Court observed that it was during the six or seven months immediately
preceding trial that "a barrage of newspaper headlines, articles,
cartoons and pictures was unleashed against [the defendant]." Id., at
725. In this case, the extensive adverse publicity and the community's
sense of outrage were at their height prior to Yount's first trial in
1966. The jury selection for Yount's second trial, at issue here, did
not occur until four years later, at a time when prejudicial publicity
was greatly diminished and community sentiment had softened. In these
circumstances, we hold that the trial court did not commit manifest
error in finding that the jury as a whole was impartial.
The record reveals that in the year and a half from the reversal of
the first conviction to the start of the second voir dire each of the
two Clearfield County daily newspapers published an average of less
than one article per month. App. 642a-657a; Record, Ex. P-1-v to
P-1-kk, P-2. More important, many of these were extremely brief
announcements of the trial dates and scheduling such as are common in
rural newspapers. E. g., App. 653a-656a; Record, Ex. P-1-ff, P-1-ii,
P-1-jj. The transcript of the voir dire contains numerous references
to the sparse publicity and minimal public interest prior to the
second trial. E. g., App. 43a, 98a, 100a; Tr. (Nov. 4, 1970) 27-28,
90, 191, 384, 771, 829, 1142. It is true that during the voir dire the
newspapers published articles on an almost daily basis, but these too
were purely factual articles generally discussing not the crime or
prior prosecution, but the prolonged process of jury selection. App.
658a-671a. In short, the record of publicity in the
[467 U.S. 1025, 1033]
months preceding, and at the time of, the second trial
does not reveal the "barrage of inflammatory publicity immediately
prior to trial," Murphy v. Florida,
421 U.S. 794, 798 (1975), amounting to a "huge . . . wave of
public passion," Irvin,
366 U.S., at 728 , that the Court found in Irvin.
The voir dire testimony revealed that this lapse in time had a
profound effect on the community and, more important, on the jury, in
softening or effacing opinion. Many veniremen, of course, simply had
let the details of the case slip from their minds. E. g., App. 194a;
Tr. 33, 284, 541-544, 991. In addition, while it is true that a number
of jurors and veniremen testified that at one time they had held
opinions, for many, time had weakened or eliminated any conviction
they had had. See, e. g., App. 98a-100a (juror number 7), 128a (juror
number 8); Tr. 384-385, 398-399, 831, 897 (semble), 1075-1076, 1144;
see also App. 164a-166a (juror number 10).
8 [467 U.S. 1025,
1034] The same is true of the testimony of the jurors and
veniremen who were seated late in the process and therefore were
subjected to some of the articles and broadcasts disseminated daily
during the voir dire:
9 the record suggests that their passions had not been inflamed
nor their thoughts biased by the publicity. E. g., id., at 176a-177a,
150a-151a; Tr. 771, 959, 1027.
That time soothes and erases is a perfectly natural phenomenon,
familiar to all. See Irvin v. Dowd, 271 F.2d 552, 561 (CA7 1959)
(Duffy, J., dissenting) (A continuance should have been granted
because "[t]he passage of time is a great healer," and public
prejudice might have "subsid[ed]"), rev'd,
366 U.S. 717 (1961); see also Murphy, supra, at 802; Beck v.
Washington,
369 U.S. 541, 556 (1962). Not all members of the venire had put
aside earlier prejudice, as the voir dire disclosed. They retained
their fixed opinions, and were disqualified. But the testimony
suggests that the voir dire resulted in selecting those who had
forgotten or would need to be persuaded again.
10 [467 U.S.
1025, 1035]
The Court of Appeals below thought that the fact that the great
majority of veniremen "remembered the case" showed that time had not
served "to erase highly unfavorable publicity from the memory of [the]
community." 710 F.2d, at 969. This conclusion, without more, is
essentially irrelevant. The relevant question is not whether the
community remembered the case, but whether the jurors at Yount's trial
had such fixed opinions that they could not judge impartially the
guilt of the defendant. Irvin,
366 U.S., at 723 . It is not unusual that one's recollection of
the fact that a notorious crime was committed lingers long after the
feelings of revulsion that create prejudice have passed. It would be
fruitless to attempt to identify any particular lapse of time that in
itself would distinguish the situation that existed in Irvin.
11 But it is clear that the passage of time between a first and a
second trial can be a highly relevant fact. In the circumstances of
this case, we hold that it clearly rebuts any presumption of
partiality or prejudice that existed at the time of the initial trial.
There was fair, even abundant, support for the trial court's findings
that between the two trials of this case there had been "practically
no publicity given to this matter through the news media," and that
there had not been "any great effect created by any publicity." App.
268a, 265a. [467 U.S.
1025, 1036]
III
Yount briefly argues here that juror Hrin, as well as the two
alternates, were erroneously seated over his challenges for cause.
Brief for Respondent 32. There is substantial doubt whether Yount
properly raised in his petition for habeas corpus the claim that the
trial court erroneously denied his challenge for cause to juror Hrin.
Compare 710 F.2d, at 966, n. 18, with id., at 977, and n. 4 (Garth,
J., concurring). And there is no evidence that the alternate jurors,
who did not sit in judgment, actually talked with the other jurors
during the 4-day trial. But Judge Garth in the court below based his
concurrence on the view that Hrin would have required Yount to produce
evidence to overcome his inclination to think the accused was guilty,
and the majority of the panel thought that the 4-day association
between the alternates and the other jurors "operate[d] to subvert the
requirement that the jury's verdict be based on evidence developed
from the witness stand," id., at 971, n. 25. Therefore, we will
consider briefly the claims as to all three jurors.
It was the view of all three Court of Appeals judges that the
question whether jurors have opinions that disqualify them is a mixed
question of law and fact. See id., at 968, n. 20, 981. Thus, they
concluded that the presumption of correctness due a state court's
factual findings under 28 U.S.C. 2254(d) does not apply. The opinions
below relied for this proposition on Irvin v. Dowd,
366 U.S., at 723 . Irvin addressed the partiality of the trial
jury as a whole, a question we discuss in Part II, supra. We do not
think its analysis can be extended to a federal habeas corpus case in
which the partiality of an individual juror is placed in issue. That
question is not one of mixed law and fact. Rather it is plainly one of
historical fact: did a juror swear that he could set aside any opinion
he might hold and decide the case on the evidence, and should the
juror's protestation of impartiality have been believed. Cf. Rushen v.
Spain,
464 U.S. 114 , [467
U.S. 1025, 1037] 120 (1983) (state-court determination
that juror's deliberations were not biased by ex parte communications
is a finding of fact).
12 [467 U.S.
1025, 1038]
There are good reasons to apply the statutory presumption of
correctness to the trial court's resolution of these questions. First,
the determination has been made only after an often extended voir dire
proceeding designed specifically to identify biased veniremen. It is
fair to assume that the method we have relied on since the beginning,
e. g., United States v. Burr, 25 F. Cas. 49, 51 (No. 14,692g) (CC Va.
1807) (Marshall, C. J.), usually identifies bias.
13 Second, the determination is essentially one of credibility,
and therefore largely one of demeanor. As we have said on numerous
occasions, the trial court's resolution of such questions is entitled,
even on direct appeal, to "special deference." E. g., Bose Corp. v.
Consumers Union of U.S., Inc.,
466 U.S. 485, 500 (1984). The respect paid such findings in a
habeas proceeding certainly should be no less. See Marshall v.
Lonberger,
459 U.S. 422, 434 -435 (1983).
14
Thus the question is whether there is fair support in the record
for the state courts' conclusion that the jurors here would be
impartial. See 28 U.S.C. 2254(d)(8). The testimony
[467 U.S. 1025, 1039]
of each of the three challenged jurors is ambiguous and
at times contradictory. This is not unusual on voir dire examination,
particularly in a highly publicized criminal case. It is well to
remember that the lay persons on the panel may never have been
subjected to the type of leading questions and cross-examination
tactics that frequently are employed, and that were evident in this
case. Prospective jurors represent a cross section of the community,
and their education and experience vary widely. Also, unlike
witnesses, prospective jurors have had no briefing by lawyers prior to
taking the stand. Jurors thus cannot be expected invariably to express
themselves carefully or even consistently. Every trial judge
understands this, and under our system it is that judge who is best
situated to determine competency to serve impartially. The trial judge
properly may choose to believe those statements that were the most
fully articulated or that appeared to have been least influenced by
leading.
The voir dire examination of juror Hrin was carefully scrutinized
by the state courts and the Federal District Court, as he was
challenged for cause and was a member of the jury that convicted the
defendant. We think that the trial judge's decision to seat Hrin,
despite early ambiguity in his testimony, was confirmed after he
initially denied the challenge. Defense counsel sought and obtained
permission to resume cross-examination. In response to a question
whether Hrin could set his opinion aside before entering the jury box
or would need evidence to change his mind, the juror clearly and
forthrightly stated: "I think I could enter it [the jury box] with a
very open mind. I think I could . . . very easily. To say this is a
requirement for some of the things you have to do every day." App.
89a. After this categorical answer, defense counsel did not renew
their challenge for cause. Similarly, in the case of alternate juror
Pyott, we cannot fault the trial judge for crediting her earliest
testimony, in which she said that she could put her opinion aside "[i]f
[she] had to," rather than the later testimony in
[467 U.S. 1025, 1040]
which defense counsel persuaded her that logically she
would need evidence to discard any opinion she might have. Id., at
246a, 250a-252a. Alternate juror Chincharick's testimony is the most
ambiguous, as he appears simply to have answered "yes" to almost any
question put to him. It is here that the federal court's deference
must operate, for while the cold record arouses some concern, only the
trial judge could tell which of these answers was said with the
greatest comprehension and certainty.
IV
We conclude that the voir dire testimony and the record of
publicity do not reveal the kind of "wave of public passion" that
would have made a fair trial unlikely by the jury that was empaneled
as a whole. We also conclude that the ambiguity in the testimony of
the cited jurors who were challenged for cause is insufficient to
overcome the presumption of correctness owed to the trial court's
findings. We therefore reverse.
JUSTICE MARSHALL took no part in the decision of this case.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] The Court of Appeals rejected as without fair support
in the record the trial court's conclusion that there was practically
no publicity given to the case between the first and second trials.
See 710 F.2d 956, 969, n. 21 (1983). The federal court suggested that
the record on habeas of the publicity after the first trial and during
the second was more complete than the record considered by the trial
court. Ibid.
The Court of Appeals also suggested that the trial court's view
that there was little talk in public concerning the second trial was
undermined by the voir dire testimony that there had been public
discussion of the case, particularly in the last weeks before retrial.
Id., at 969, n. 22. The court discounted, as of limited significance,
the trial court's point that few spectators had attended the trial,
since Yount did not allege prejudice arising from the "circus
atmosphere'" in the courtroom. Ibid.
[
Footnote 2 ] One hundred twenty-five of the original 292 veniremen
were excused because they had not been chosen properly. Four others
were dismissed for cause before they were questioned on the case.
[
Footnote 3 ] The Court of Appeals noted that in Irvin 8 of 12
jurors had formed opinions of guilt.
[
Footnote 4 ] Judge Stern wrote a separate concurring opinion in
which he suggested that the "constitutional standard which for 175
years has guided the lower courts" in this area be rejected. 710 F.2d,
at 972. Rather than hinge disqualification of a juror on whether he
has a fixed opinion of guilt that he cannot lay aside, Judge Stern
would bar any juror who admitted any opinion as to guilt. Moreover, no
jury could be empaneled where more than 25% of the veniremen state
that they held an opinion concerning the defendant's guilt. This would
raise such doubts as to the sincerity of those who claimed no opinion
as to suggest concealed bias, Judge Stern wrote.
[
Footnote 5 ] Judge Garth thought Irvin was distinguishable,
because there "the trial court (which itself questioned the jurors
challenged for cause) did not engage in a searching and thorough voir
dire." 710 F.2d, at 979. Rather, it merely credited the jurors'
subjective opinions that each could render an impartial verdict
notwithstanding his or her opinion. Judge Garth also noted that Yount
challenged for cause only three of the actual jurors. In Irvin, the
defendant challenged each of his 12 jurors for cause. Irvin v. Dowd,
359 U.S. 394, 398 (1959).
[
Footnote 6 ] Judge Garth stated that whether juror Hrin was
unconstitutionally biased was a mixed question of law and fact under
Irvin. 710 F.2d, at 981. He therefore did not apply the presumption of
correctness that is applicable to the factual findings of a state
court in a federal habeas corpus proceeding, 28 U.S.C. 2254(d).
[
Footnote 7 ] The Court of Appeals appears to have thought that two
statements in Irvin - that a federal court must "independently
evaluate" the voir dire testimony, and that the question of juror
partiality is a mixed question of law and fact,
366 U.S., at 723 - meant that there is no presumption of
correctness owed to the trial court's finding that a jury as a whole
is impartial. We note that Irvin was decided five years before
Congress added to the habeas corpus statute an explicit presumption of
correctness for state-court factual findings, see Pub. L. 89-711, 80
Stat. 1105-1106, and two years before this Court's opinion in Townsend
v. Sain,
372 U.S. 293 (1963), provided the guidelines that were later
codified. It may be that there is little practical difference between
the Irvin "manifest error" standard and the "fairly supported by the
record" standard of the amended habeas statute. See 28 U.S.C. 2254(d).
In any case, we do not think the
[467 U.S. 1025, 1032] habeas standard is
any less stringent. Since we uphold the state court's findings in this
case under Irvin "manifest error" standard, we do not need to
determine whether the subsequent development of the law of habeas
corpus might have required a different analysis or result in that
case.
[
Footnote 8 ] The testimony of juror number 7, Martin Karetski,
during examination by defense counsel is illustrative:
"Q. And just recently when this matter was coming up again, I
presume?
"Q. Back around '66, did you?
"Q. Let me ask you this then. In case you do have an opinion,
could you wipe it out of your mind - erase it out of your mind
before you would take a seat in the jury box and hear whatever
evidence you might hear?
"A. As it is right now I have no opinion now - four or five years
ago I probably did but right now I don't.
"Q. What happened Mr. Karetski, between then and now to eliminate
that opinion if you can tell me?
"A. Well, as far as I'm concerned there wasn't much in the paper
about it and it sort of slipped away from thought." App. 98a-100a.
[
Footnote 9 ] Jurors were sequestered as they were chosen.
[
Footnote 10 ] As noted, the voir dire in this case was
particularly extensive. It took 10 days to pick 14 jurors from 292
veniremen. In Irvin it took 8 days to pick 14 jurors from 430
veniremen.
Contrary to Judge Garth's surmise, 710 F.2d, at 979, however, the
voir dire interviews quoted in the petitioner's brief in Irvin do not
appear to be significantly less probing than those here. See Brief for
Petitioner in Irvin v. Dowd, O. T. 1960, No. 41, pp. 18-59. It should
also be noted that the voir dire in Irvin, like that here, was
conducted largely by counsel for
[467 U.S. 1025, 1035] each side, rather
than the judge. The only significant difference in the procedures
followed here and in Irvin is that the veniremen here were brought
into the courtroom alone for questioning, while it appears that those
in Irvin were questioned in front of all those remaining in the panel.
This is not an insubstantial distinction, as the Court suggested in
Irvin,
366 U.S., at 728 , but we do not find it controlling.
[
Footnote 11 ] In Murphy v. Florida,
421 U.S. 794 (1975), the defendant - widely known as "Murph the
Surf" - relied heavily on Irvin. The record of damaging publicity
preceding his trial was at least as extreme as that in this case.
Nevertheless, we found the record there distinguishable from Irvin. We
noted that the extensive publication of news articles about Murphy
largely had ceased some seven months before the jury was selected.
421 U.S., at 802 . Murphy involved a lapse in publicity prior to
the defendant's first trial; there was no second trial in that case.
[
Footnote 12 ] There are, of course, factual and legal questions to
be considered in deciding whether a juror is qualified. The
constitutional standard that a juror is impartial only if he can lay
aside his opinion and render a verdict based on the evidence presented
in court is a question of federal law, see Irvin,
366 U.S., at 723 ; whether a juror can in fact do that is a
determination to which habeas courts owe special deference, see Rushen,
464 U.S., at 120 . Cf. Marshall v. Lonberger,
459 U.S. 422, 431 -432 (1983) (similar analysis as to whether a
guilty plea was voluntary). See also Reynolds v. United States,
98 U.S. 145, 156 (1879) (whether a juror should be disqualified is
a question involving both a legal standard and findings of fact; the
latter may be set aside only for manifest error).
The dissent misreads the Court's opinion in Reynolds v. United
States. Post, at 1050-1052, and nn. 6 and 7. Reynolds was decided some
87 years before the presumption of correctness for factual findings
was added to 28 U.S.C. 2254. The Court clearly did not attach the same
significance to the phrase "a question of mixed law and fact" that we
do today under modern habeas law. It recognized that
juror-disqualification questions may raise both a question of law -
whether the correct standard was applied - and a question of fact.
Whether an opinion expressed by a juror was such as to meet the legal
standard for disqualification was viewed as a question of fact as to
which deference was due to the trial court's determination. This is
apparent from the language quoted by the dissent, which notes that
while the question is one of "mixed law and fact," it is "to be tried,
as far as the facts are concerned, like any other issue of that
character, upon the evidence. The finding of the trial court upon that
issue ought not to be set aside by a reviewing court, unless the error
is manifest."
98 U.S., at 156 . Plainly, factual findings were to be considered
separately from the legal standard applied, and deference was due to
those findings. This is also apparent from the following passage:
"[T]he manner of the juror while testifying is oftentimes more
indicative of the real character of his opinion than his words. That
is seen below, but cannot always be spread upon the record. Care
should, therefore, be taken in the reviewing court not to reverse
the ruling below upon such a question of fact, except in a clear
case." Id., at 156-157 (emphasis added).
Taken together, these passages plainly show that the "character of
[a juror's] opinion" was considered a question of fact. Contrary to
the suggestion of the dissent, post, at 1050, n. 6, the factual
question was not limited
[467 U.S. 1025, 1038] to whether the juror
was telling the truth, but included discovering the "real character"
of any opinion held. Deference was due to the trial court's
conclusions on that question.
[
Footnote 13 ] Accord, In re Application of National Broadcasting
Co., 209 U.S. App. D.C. 354, 362, 653 F.2d 609, 617 (1981) ("[V]oir
dire has long been recognized as an effective method of rooting out
such bias, especially when conducted in a careful and thoroughgoing
manner"); United States v. Duncan, 598 F.2d 839, 865 (CA4), cert.
denied,
444 U.S. 871 (1979); Calley v. Callaway, 519 F.2d 184, 209, n. 45
(CA5 1975) (en banc) (citing cases), cert. denied sub nom. Calley v.
Hoffman,
425 U.S. 911 (1976). But cf. Smith v. Phillips,
455 U.S. 209, 222 , and n. (1982) (O'CONNOR, J., concurring)
(describing situations in which state procedures are inadequate to
uncover bias); Rideau v. Louisiana,
373 U.S. 723 (1963) (same).
[
Footnote 14 ] Demeanor plays a fundamental role not only in
determining juror credibility, but also in simply understanding what a
potential juror is saying. Any complicated voir dire calls upon lay
persons to think and express themselves in unfamiliar terms, as a
reading of any transcript of such a proceeding will reveal. Demeanor,
inflection, the flow of the questions and answers can make confused
and conflicting utterances comprehensible.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN joins, dissenting.
On page 1 of its opinion the Court carefully states certain facts
that give the reader a strong feeling about how this case should be
decided. In 1966, Jon Yount confessed that he was responsible for the
brutal killing of an 18-year-old high school student. At his first
trial in 1966 he testified that he had been temporarily insane at the
time, but the jury did not believe him. He was found guilty of rape,
as well as murder. These facts were not admissible in evidence at his
second trial. What impact, if any, did these inadmissible facts have
upon 12 jurors, the 2 alternate jurors, and indeed the trial judge,
who listened to the evidence at Yount's second trial in 1970? The
Court is satisfied that "community sentiment had
[467 U.S. 1025, 1041]
softened," ante, at 1032, and that the trial judge "did
not commit manifest error in finding that the jury as a whole was
impartial," ibid., because of the passage of time between 1966 and
1970, and because we all know that "time soothes and erases," ante, at
1034.
In order to explain why I disagree with the Court's assessment of
the case, it is necessary to enlarge upon its summary of the news
coverage of the crime and its aftermath, to supplement its discussion
of the examination of the jurors, and to explain why the Court of
Appeals properly rejected the trial judge's conclusion that the jury
as a whole was impartial. Next, I will discuss my disagreement with
the Court's conclusion regarding juror Hrin. Finally, I shall add a
word about the more profound issue that a case of this kind raises.
I
Because the Court places such great emphasis on the fact that "this
lapse in time had a profound effect on the community and, more
important, on the jury, in softening or effacting opinion," ante, at
1033, it is important to note that there were, in effect, three
chapters in the relevant news coverage: the stories about the crime
itself and the first trial in 1966; the stories and events surrounding
the State Supreme Court's reversal of the first conviction in 1969;
and the stories that were published in 1970 immediately before the
second trial began and while the jury was being selected.
The relevant events all occurred in Clearfield County, Pa., where
both Yount and the victim lived. It is a rural county, with a
population of about 70,000, served by two newspapers with a combined
circulation of about 25,000. Not surprisingly, both newspapers gave
front-page coverage to the homicide, the pretrial proceedings, and the
trial itself. In numerous editions of the DuBois Courier Express, the
newspaper carried banner headlines on the front page, news stories and
feature articles. App. 520a-641a; Record, Ex. P-1-a, P-1-b, P-1-d,
P-1-f to P-1-t. The Clearfield Progress evaluated the trial as the
"Top News Story of [467
U.S. 1025, 1042] 1966." Record, Ex. P-2, p. 2. Both
papers reported that public interest in the proceedings was
"unprecedented." 710 F.2d 956, 962 (CA3 1983). Moreover, the case also
received radio and television coverage, see, e. g., Tr. (Nov. 4, 1970)
64 (juror number 1), 142, 220, 277, and, according to the Court of
Appeals, was publicized in out-of-state and national publications. 710
F.2d, at 962, n. 6.
The articles were extremely detailed.
1 As the Court of Appeals noted, they "related in full [Yount's]
detailed written confessions as well as his testimony at trial
retelling the homicide. They also detailed [Yount's] defense of
temporary insanity, the charge and evidence of rape, and finally [Yount's]
conviction on October 7, 1966, of both rape and first-degree murder."
Id., at 963; see, e. g., App. 538a-540a, 603a-606a. As this Court
notes, "the extensive adverse publicity and the community's sense of
outrage were at their height prior to Yount's first trial in 1966,"
ante, at 1032.
In 1969, a divided Supreme Court of Pennsylvania reversed Yount's
conviction and ordered a new trial. Commonwealth v. Yount, 435 Pa.
276, 256 A. 2d 464 (1969), cert. denied,
397 U.S. 925 (1970). This event did not pass unnoticed in
Clearfield County. To the contrary, banner headlines announced the
reversal. App. 642a; Record, Ex. P-1-v. The local press reprinted the
entire dissenting opinion. App. 644a; Record, Ex. P-1-x. And, as the
Court of Appeals stated, "a local radio program became a forum in
[467 U.S. 1025, 1043]
which callers expressed their hostility to [Yount]." 710
F.2d, at 963. This evidence contradicts the easy assumption that
"community sentiment had softened," ante, at 1032.
In 1970, Yount was returned to Clearfield County for a retrial in
the same courtroom before the same judge who had presided at the first
trial - the judge whose erroneous rulings had made the second trial
necessary. Yount moved for a change of venue on the ground that the
continuing discussion of the case among local residents made it
impossible for him to receive a fair trial in Clearfield County. In
response the prosecutor argued that a change of venue would be
pointless because the case had been so widely publicized throughout
the State. The trial court denied the motion, explaining that the
recent newspaper items had consisted of purely factual reporting
"without editorial comment of any kin[d]." App. 260a. This venue
ruling generated a front-page article. Id., at 654a; Record, Ex.
P-1-gg. Additionally, during the subsequent voir dire, the selection
of jurors merited numerous articles and sometimes merited a profile on
the juror selected. App. 658a-659a, 661a-663a, 664a-671a; Record, Ex.
P-1-II, P-1-nn to P-1-vv; P-2.
The voir dire testimony of one prospective juror, the wife of a
minister, sheds a revelatory light on the character of local sentiment
on the eve of the second trial. After acknowledging that she had heard
many opinions about the case, she was asked:
"A. Why yes - when people heard my name on for this - countless
people of the church have come to me and said they hoped I would
take - the stand I would take in case I was called. I have had a
prejudice built up from the people in the church.
"A. Yes it was. They all say he had a fair trial and he got a
fair sentence. He's lucky he didn't get the chair.
"[T]he church people - I haven't asked for any of this but they
discuss it in every group - but they say now since you are chosen
and you will be there we expect you to follow through.
"Q. Notwithstanding what the Court would tell you, you feel you
would be subject to the retributions or retaliation of these people
-
The minister's wife was excused. Her testimony, as well as that of
other veniremen who were excused, not only repudiates the notion that
the community had all but forgotten the Yount case, but also suggests
that some veniremen might have been tempted to understate their
recollection of the case because they felt they had a duty to their
neighbors "to follow through."
2 In all events, the record clearly establishes that the case was
still a "cause celebre" in Clearfield County in 1970.
II
Even if all the voir dire testimony is accepted at face value, it
is difficult to understand how a neutral observer could conclude that
the jury as a whole was impartial. Before referring to the 12 jurors
and 2 alternates who were selected, it is useful to describe the
attitude that pervaded the entire venire.
The jury selection took 10 days. Id., at 745a; 710 F.2d, at 963,
975. Out of an original total of 292 veniremen, the court dismissed
129 because they had been chosen improperly, Tr. 685-686, or had a
valid reason for not serving. Id., at 117-118, 492, 1039, 1060-1061.
Of the remaining 163 who
[467 U.S. 1025, 1045] were questioned, all
but 2 had read or heard about the case, id., at 127a-128a, 370a-371a
(juror number 4); all but 42 were dismissed for cause. 710 F.2d, at
963. Of the 121 dismissed for cause, 96 testified that they had firm
opinions that could not be changed regardless of what evidence might
be presented. Twenty-one others testified that they could only change
their opinion if Yount could convince them to do so. In addition,
there were nine veniremen who were unsuccessfully challenged for cause
who also testified that they had opinions that they could change only
if Yount could convince them to do so.
3 Id., at 963-964. Thus, as Judge Hunter summarized for the Court
of Appeals:
"When we combine those nine with the 117 veniremen dismissed for
cause, we find that a total of 126 out of the 163 veniremen
questioned on the case were willing to admit on voir dire that they
would carry their opinion[s] into the jury box."
4 Id., at 964.
Turning to the jurors who were actually selected, Judge Hunter
accurately noted that "the publicity had reached all but one of the
twelve jurors and two alternates finally empanelled." Ibid. (footnote
omitted); App. 32a, 43a, 71a, 83a, 98a, 120a, 149a, 163a, 176a, 193a,
210a, 235a, 250a. Juror number 1 noted that "it was pretty hard to be
here in Clearfield County and not read something in the paper" about
the case; that she had read newspaper stories and listened
[467 U.S. 1025, 1046]
to radio and television stories about the case; and that
she had heard the case being discussed by other people. Id., at 32a.
Juror number 2 testified that he had read about the case in the
newspapers; that "[y]ou could hardly miss it on [radio and television]
news"; and that he had formed an opinion about the case. Id., at
43a-44a. The person seated as juror number 3
5 stated that he had read about the case in the newspapers years
before the voir dire but that he had not formed an opinion. Id., at
210a-211a. Juror number 4, a newcomer to the area, had never heard of
the case. Id., at 57a-58a. Juror number 5 "remembered that they had
said he was guilty before" and wondered why they were having another
trial. Id., at 73a. James F. Hrin, juror number 6, testified that he
had an opinion about the case and that he would require the
presentation of evidence to change it. Id., at 83a, 85a. He noted that
"[i]t's rather difficult to live in DuBois and get the paper and find
out what people are talking about - at least the local . . . people
without having some opinion or at least reserving some opinion." Id.,
at 88a. Juror number 7 stated that he had read about the case; that he
had formed an opinion; and that he was not sure whether he still had
an opinion. Id., at 98a-99a. Juror number 8 testified that she had
heard others express opinions concerning the case and she only had an
opinion "on just what he said himself - that he was guilty." Id., at
120a, 125a. Juror number 9 stated that she had felt that petitioner
was guilty but that presently she would have to hear both sides before
forming an opinion. Id., at 150a. Juror number 10 had heard people
express their opinions and had on occasion expressed his own opinion
about the case. He also stated that he would listen to both sides
before forming a present opinion. Id., at 164a-165a. Juror number 11
testified that he had read newspaper accounts of the case but that he
had [467 U.S. 1025,
1047] formed no opinion. Id., at 177a. Juror number 12
had read about the case but she had formed no opinion. Id., at
193a-194a. Two alternates were seated over Yount's challenges for
cause. Alternate number 1 stated that he had heard people express
opinions and ideas about the case; that he had expressed an opinion;
that he still had a firm and fixed opinion based on what he read in
the newspapers; and that he would require evidence to be presented
before he could put his opinion out of his mind. Id., at 235a-240a.
Alternate number 2 stated that she had formed a definite opinion and
that she would require the production of evidence to change her mind.
Id., at 251a-252a.
The totality of these circumstances convinces me that the trial
judge committed manifest error in determining that the jury as a whole
was impartial. The trial judge's comment that there was little talk in
public about the second trial, id., at 264a, is plainly inconsistent
with the evidence adduced during the voir dire. Similarly, the trial
court's statement that "there was practically no publicity given to
this matter through the news media . . . except to report that a new
trial had been granted by the Supreme Court," id., at 268a, simply
ignores at least 55 front-page articles that are in the record.
Record, Ex. P-1, P-2. Further, the trial judge's statement that
"almost all, if not all, [of the first 12] jurors . . . had no prior
or present fixed opinion," App. 264a, is manifestly erroneous; a
review of the record reveals that 5 of the 12 had acknowledged either
a prior or a present opinion. Id., at 43a-44a, 83a, 98a-99a, 150a,
164a-165a. The trial judge's "practically no publicity" statement also
ignores the first-trial details within the news stories. These
included Yount's confessions, testimony, and conviction of rape - all
of which were outside of the evidence presented at the second trial.
See id., at 643a-644a, 650a, 655a; Record, Ex. P-1-w, P-1-x, P-1-z,
P-1-cc, P-1-hh. Under these circumstances, I do not believe that the
jury was capable of deciding the case solely on the evidence before
it. Smith v. Phillips,
[467 U.S. 1025, 1048]
455 U.S. 209, 217 (1982) ("Due process means a jury capable and
willing to decide the case solely on the evidence before it").
III
The Court today also rejects Yount's claim that juror Hrin was
erroneously seated over his challenge for cause. Before explaining why
I disagree with this conclusion, it is necessary to set forth a more
complete version of Hrin's voir dire testimony than is set forth by
the Court.
Hrin, in response to the prosecution's questioning, gave the
following testimony:
"A. To the degree that it was written up in the papers, yes.
"Q. Let me ask - if you were to be selected as a juror in this
case and take the jury box, could you erase or remove the opinion
you now hold and render a verdict based solely on the evidence and
law produced at this trial?
"A. I would say not, because I work at a job where I have to
change my mind constantly.
"Q. Would you be able to change your mind regarding your opinion
before becoming a juror in this case.
"Q. Can you enter the jury box with an open mind prepared to find
your verdict on the evidence as presented at trial and the law . . .
presented by the Judge?
Yount's counsel elicited further testimony through
cross-examination:
"Q. Did I understand Mr. Hrin you would require some - you would
. . . require evidence or something before you could change your
opinion you now have?
"A. Definitely. If the facts show a difference from what I had
originally - had been led to believe, I would definitely change my
mind.
"Q. But until you're shown those facts, you would not change your
mind - is that your position?
"Q. I understand. Then the answer is yes - you would not change
your mind until you were presented facts?
"A. Right, but I would enter it with an open mind.
"Q. In other words, you're saying that while facts were presented
you would keep an open mind and after that you would feel free to
change your mind?
"A. Right." Id., at 85a-86a.
Yount's counsel subsequently challenged for cause; the court denied
the challenge because Hrin "said he could go in with an open mind."
Id., at 86a.
First, even if we regard the relevant rulings as findings of fact,
Hrin's testimony clearly is sufficient to overcome the presumption of
correctness due a state court's factual findings under 28 U.S.C.
2254(d). The state court's determination is not fairly supported by
the record. Hrin not only
[467 U.S. 1025, 1050] indicated that he
had a previous opinion as to Yount's guilt or innocence, but also that
he required evidence produced at trial to dispel that opinion.
Further, he stated - pursuant to the prosecution's questioning - that
"[i]t would be rather difficult . . . to answer" whether he could
enter the jury box presuming Yount's innocence. Under these
circumstances, I am convinced that the trial court improperly
empaneled Hrin.
More important, however, I believe the Court's analysis regarding
whether a juror has a disqualifying opinion is flawed. The Court
begins by stating that such a question is one of historical fact,
ante, at 1036. It then concludes, simply, that this factual finding is
entitled to 28 U.S.C. 2254(d)'s presumption of correctness. Finally,
it acknowledges that "[t]here are, of course, factual and legal
questions to be considered in deciding whether a juror is qualified,"
ante, at 1037, n. 12, and cites as one authority Reynolds v. United
States,
98 U.S. 145 (1879).
6 [467 U.S. 1025,
1051]
Contrary to the Court, I believe that whether a juror has a
disqualifying opinion is a mixed question of law and fact. The proper
starting point of analysis is Reynolds v. United States, supra. In
that case, the defendant excepted to the trial court's decision to
reject several challenges for cause that were based on juror testimony
during voir dire. Id., at 146-147. This Court upheld the trial court's
decision. Id., at 157. Before reaching its ultimate conclusion, the
Court stated:
"The theory of law is that a juror who has formed an opinion
cannot be impartial. Every opinion which he may entertain need not
necessarily have this effect. In these days of newspaper enterprise
and universal education, every case of public interest is almost, as
a matter of necessity, brought to the attention of all the
intelligent people in the vicinity, and scarcely any one can be
found among the best fitted for jurors who has not read or heard of
it, and who has not some impression or some opinion in respect to
its merits. It is clear, therefore, that upon the trial of the issue
of fact raised by a challenge for such cause the court will
practically be called upon to determine whether the nature and
strength of the opinion formed are such as in law necessarily to
raise the presumption of partiality. The question thus presented is
one of mixed law and fact, and to be tried, as far as the facts are
concerned, like any other issue of that
[467 U.S. 1025, 1052]
character, upon the evidence. The finding of the trial
court upon that issue ought not to be set aside by a reviewing
court, unless the error is manifest." Id., at 155-156.
Irvin v. Dowd,
366 U.S. 717 (1961), extended Reynolds to habeas corpus
proceedings. Initially, Irvin noted that a presumption of a
prospective juror's impartiality is not rebutted "if the juror can lay
aside his impression or opinion and render a verdict based on the
evidence presented in court."
366 U.S., at 723 . Next, the Court affirmed that a proper inquiry
may demonstrate "`whether the nature and strength of the opinion
formed are such as in law necessarily . . . raise the presumption of
partiality,'" ibid. (quoting Reynolds v. United States, supra, at
156), and that this inquiry is "`one of mixed law and fact.'"
366 U.S., at 723 .
Thus, Reynolds and Irvin teach that the question whether a juror
has an opinion that disqualifies is a mixed one of law and fact.
Therefore, one cannot apply the presumption of correctness found in 28
U.S.C. 2254(d) because the statutory language by definition applies
only to the factual determinations of state courts. Applying the
proper analytical framework, I believe that Hrin's testimony clearly
raised a presumption of partiality. Therefore, the trial judge
committed manifest error by improperly empaneling Hrin.
7
There is a special reason to require independent review in a case
that arouses the passions of the local community in which an elected
judge is required to preside. Unlike an appointed federal judge with
life tenure, an elected judge has reason to be concerned about the
community's reaction to his
[467 U.S. 1025, 1053] disposition of
highly publicized cases. Even in the federal judiciary, some Circuits
have determined that it is sound practice to have the retrial of a
case assigned to a different judge than the one whose erroneous ruling
made another trial necessary; for though the risk that a judge will
subconsciously strive to vindicate the result reached at the first
trial may be remote, as long as human beings preside at trials, that
possibility cannot be ignored entirely.
IV
Two additional and somewhat disturbing questions merit comment: (1)
why did this Court exercise its discretionary jurisdiction to review
this case; and (2) even if the Court of Appeals' analysis of the case
is entirely correct, why should those federal judges order the great
writ of habeas corpus to issue for the benefit of a prisoner like
Yount, who, it would seem, is guilty of a heinous offense?
The answer to the question why the Court grants certiorari in any
given case usually involves considerations of both fact and law. It
appears that the facts motivated the Court to select this case for
plenary review. The facts that had such a motivating impact on this
Court - that the conviction of a confessed murderer of a high school
student had been set aside by an appellate court - also, I believe,
must have had an emotional and unforgettable impact on the residents
of Clearfield County. The desire to "follow through" - to do something
about such an apparent miscarriage of justice - is difficult for
judges as well as laymen to resist.
8
It should not be forgotten that Yount has already been incarcerated
for 18 years. If, as the Court of Appeals held, he
[467 U.S. 1025, 1054]
has not yet been found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt
in a fair trial, the possibility remains that he has already received
a greater punishment than is warranted. Of much greater importance is
our dedication to the principle that guilt or innocence of a criminal
offense in our society is not to be decided by executive fiat or by
popular vote. This is a principle that affords protection for every
citizen in the United States. Justice Frankfurter stated this point in
his concurrence in Irvin v. Dowd:
"More than one student of society has expressed the view that not
the least significant test of the quality of a civilization is its
treatment of those charged with crime, particularly with offenses
which arouse the passions of a community. One of the rightful boasts
of Western civilization is that the State has the burden of
establishing guilt solely on the basis of evidence produced in court
and under circumstances assuring an accused all the safeguards of a
fair procedure. These rudimentary conditions for determining guilt
are inevitably wanting if the jury which is to sit in judgment on a
fellow human being comes to its task with its mind ineradicably
poisoned against him."
366 U.S., at 729 .
I would affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 1 ] The "details" of the articles prompted two citizens
to write letters to the Courier Express. One letter complained that
the paper had "fanned the already poisoned atmosphere of malicious
gossip" by putting a picture of the corpse on the front page and by
the "repetitive use of gory details." The author added that he thought
he "was looking at the National Enquirer." The second letter noted:
"Emotional editorializing most certainly has it's [sic] place in
reporting, but I strenuously object to such when it appears in
headline stories. . . . [D]escriptive words that do much to sell
newspapers and stir emotions discredit headline reporting and tend to
prejudice the suspect regardless of degree of guilt." Record, Ex.
P-1-e.
[
Footnote 2 ] As the Court of Appeals pointed out, another
prospective juror testified that his opinion had been erased by the
passage of time, but his daughter-in-law testified that he had left
for jury duty voicing great animosity toward Yount. 710 F.2d, at 964;
App. 766a.
[
Footnote 3 ] The Court of Appeals added:
"Petitioner peremptorily challenged six of those nine veniremen,
one was seated as a juror, and the remaining two were seated as
alternates after petitioner had exhausted his peremptory
challenges." 710 F.2d, at 964, n. 13.
[
Footnote 4 ] At this point, the Court of Appeals added the
following footnote:
"In addition, we note that twelve other veniremen stated that
they had had an opinion at one time but claimed they would not carry
it into the jury box. One of the twelve veniremen was dismissed for
cause, six were peremptorily challenged by petitioner, and five were
seated as jurors." Id., at 964, n. 14.
[
Footnote 5 ] The person initially selected as juror number 3 was
not able to sit because of personal reasons. Tr. 1060-1061.
[
Footnote 6 ] The Court attempts to justify its treatment of
Reynolds by quoting from a passage in that case that begins with: "[T]he
manner of the juror while testifying is oftentimes more indicative of
the real character of his opinion than his words." Ante, at 1037, n.
12 (quoting
98 U.S., at 156 -157). The excerpt from Reynolds quoted by the
Court dealt with the question whether a juror's testimony was truthful
- specifically whether a prospective juror was falsely seeking to
disqualify himself. In this case the question is whether Hrin's
testimony, including his acknowledged opinion about Yount's guilt,
raised a presumption of partiality. Whether the testimony of a witness
is true or false is a question of fact; whether his statement raises a
presumption of partiality is a mixed question of law and fact. The
fully quoted relevant passage of Reynolds demonstrates the former
point:
"The reading of the evidence leaves the impression that the juror
had some hypothetical opinion about the case, but it falls far short
of raising a manifest presumption of partiality. In considering such
questions in a reviewing court, we ought not to be unmindful of the
fact we have so often observed in our experience, that jurors not
unfrequently seek to excuse themselves on the ground of having
formed an opinion, when on examination, it turns out that no real
disqualification exists. In such cases the manner of the juror while
testifying is oftentimes more indicative of the
[467 U.S. 1025, 1051]
real character of his opinion than his words. That is
seen below, but cannot always be spread upon the record. Care
should, therefore, be taken in the reviewing court not to reverse
the ruling below upon such a question of fact except in a clear
case." Id., at 156-157 (emphasis added).
The Court also cites as authority Rushen v. Spain,
464 U.S. 114 (1983) (per curiam), and Marshall v. Lonberger,
459 U.S. 422 (1983). Neither of those cases was correctly decided.
Moreover, the latter case is plainly inapplicable because it involved
the voluntariness of guilty pleas, not juror partiality. The former
involved an allegation of juror partiality that arose after the trial
began.
[
Footnote 7 ] The Court states that it "do[es] not think [Irvin's]
analysis can be extended to a federal habeas corpus case in which the
partiality of an individual juror is placed in issue." Ante, at 1036.
The validity of Irvin (habeas corpus case) and of Reynolds (individual
jurors), and the inapplicability of 28 U.S.C. 2254(d), dispose of any
meaningful reason not to "extend" these cases to federal habeas corpus
cases in which the partiality of individual jurors is placed in issue.
[
Footnote 8 ] As I recently noted, in 19 consecutive cases in which
the Court exercised its discretion to decide a criminal case
summarily, the Court made sure that an apparently guilty defendant was
not given too much protection by the law. See Florida v. Meyers,
466 U.S. 380, 385 -387, and n. 3 (1984). The string of consecutive
summary victories for the prosecution now stands at 20. See
Massachusetts v. Upton,
466 U.S. 727 (1984) (per curiam).
[467 U.S. 1025, 1]
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