UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee, v. GRADY THOMAS, a/k/a Gates Thomas; LORAY THOMAS; RAMSE THOMAS,
a/k/a Rock Thomas; TRACEY THOMAS; JASON THOMAS, a/k/a J Thomas; LAMONT
R. JOSEPH, a/k/a Kool-Aid Joseph; CEASARE THOMAS, a/k/a Chet Thomas; SANTO
BOLDEN; MYRON THOMAS, Defendants-Appellants, CARRIE THOMAS; TERRENCE THOMAS,
a/k/a Ski Thomas; SHAWNE THOMAS; DOUGLAS STOVER; STEPHON RUSSELL, a/k/a
Swanee Russell; AUGUSTIN REYES, a/k/a Gus Reyes; LAMONT POUNCIE; CHESTER
PERKINS, a/k/a Kazar Perkins; ROY PEARSON; ABDULLAH MCKNIGHT, a/k/a Sha-Wise
McKnight; MONIQUE MCADOO; ROBERT GIBSON, a/k/a Gary Childs; RAYMOND EADDY,
a/k/a Ramel Eaddy;
MICHAEL ARMSTEAD; ANDRE NUNN, Defendants.
Docket Nos. 95-1337, 95-1338, 95-1339, 95-1347, 95-1387, 95-1406, 95-1407, 95-1416, 95-1417
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 11852
November 14, 1996, Argued
May 20, 1997, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY: [*1] Appeal
from judgments of conviction on federal narcotics charges following jury
trial in the United States District Court for the Northern District of
New York (Thomas J. McAvoy, Chief Judge). The defendants challenge, inter
alia, the district court's decision to dismiss one of the jurors during
the course of jury deliberations pursuant to FED. R. CRIM. P. 23(b). They
urge that the district court erred in finding that the juror was unwilling
to follow the court's instructions on the law. We hold that a juror's purposeful
unwillingness to apply the law, including stated intentions to (in effect)
"nullify" on the basis of racial, cultural or political affinities
with the defendants, is a proper basis for removal of a juror from a venire
or from a petit jury in the course of trial, and constitutes "just
cause" for dismissal of the juror from a deliberating jury under Rule
23(b). We also reaffirm, however, the indispensability of secrecy to the
proper functioning of the jury system and conclude that, where a deliberating
juror is alleged to be engaging in "nullification," the principle
of secrecy in jury deliberations, coupled with the need to protect against
the dismissal of a juror based [*2] on his doubts about the guilt of a
criminal defendant, requires that the juror be removed only where the record
evidence leaves no doubt that the juror was in fact engaged in deliberate
misconduct--that he was not simply unpersuaded by the Government's case
against the defendants. We hold that, in the instant case, the district
court erred in relying, as the primary basis for a deliberating juror's
removal, on a finding that the juror refused to follow the law as instructed
by the court, where the court's interviews with members of the jury raised
the possibility
that the juror was in fact following the court's instructions, but was
simply unpersuaded by the prosecution's case. Accordingly, we conclude
that, in the particular circumstances presented here, the court erred in
dismissing the
juror under Rule 23(b), and we vacate the judgments of the district court
and remand for a new trial.
DISPOSITION: Vacated the judgments of the district court and remand for a new trial.
COUNSEL: SARA M. LORD, Assistant United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York, Albany, NY (Thomas J. Maroney, United States Attorney for the Northern District of New York, Albany, NY, Michael S. Turner, law student [*3] intern, of counsel), for appellees.
RENEE N. DOYLE, Albany, NY, for defendant-appellant Grady Thomas.
THOMAS J. O'HERN, Gerstenzang, O'Hern, Hickey & Gerstenzang, Albany, NY, for defendant-appellant Loray Thomas.
J. JOHN VAN NORDEN, Van Norden
& Paul, Schenectady, NY, for defendant-appellant
Ramse Thomas.
KATHLEEN M. RESNICK, Albany, NY, for defendant-appellant Tracey Thomas.
JOSEPH M. MCCOY, Roche, Corrigan, McCoy & Bush, Albany, NY, for defendant-appellant Jason Thomas.
CYNTHIA FEATHERS, Saratoga Springs, NY, for defendant-appellant Lamont R. Joseph.
PAUL PELAGALLI, Hermann, Pelagalli & Weiner, Clifton Park, NY, for defendant-appellant Ceasare Thomas.
DAVID BRICKMAN, Albany, NY, for defendant-appellant Santo Bolden.
BARRY D. LEIWANT, Legal Aid Society, Federal Defender Division Appeals Bureau, New York, NY, for defendant-appellant Myron Thomas.
JUDGES: Before: LUMBARD, MCLAUGHLIN and CABRANES, Circuit Judges.
OPINION BY: JOSE A. CABRANES
OPINION: JOSE A. CABRANES, Circuit Judge:
We consider here the propriety
of the district court's dismissal of a juror allegedly engaged in "nullification"--the
intentional disregard of the law as stated by [*4] the presiding judge--during
the course of deliberations. We
address, in turn, (1) whether such alleged misconduct constitutes "just
cause" for dismissal of a deliberating juror under Rule 23(b) of the
Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure ("Rule 23(b)"), n1 so that
a jury of only eleven persons may continue to deliberate and return a verdict,
and (2) what evidentiary standard must be met to support a dismissal on
this ground.
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n1 FED. R. CRIM. P. 23(b) provides:
Jury of Less Than Twelve.
Juries shall be of 12 but at any time before verdict the parties may stipulate
in writing with the approval of the court that the jury shall consist of
any number less than 12 or that a valid verdict may be
returned by a jury of less than 12 should the court find it necessary to
excuse one or more jurors for any just cause after trial commences. Even
absent such stipulation, if the court finds it necessary to excuse a juror
for just cause after the jury has retired to consider its verdict, in the
discretion of the court a valid verdict may be returned by the remaining
11 jurors. (Emphasis supplied.)
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[*5]
The appellants are two sets
of defendants convicted of violations of federal narcotics laws after two
separate trials in the United States District Court for the Northern District
of New York (Thomas J. McAvoy, Chief Judge). We have
decided the appeals of defendants convicted at the first of these trials
in a summary order of this date. We write here to consider only the appeals
of Grady Thomas, Ramse Thomas, Jason Thomas, Tracey Thomas, and Loray Thomas,
all of whom were convicted in the second trial. On appeal, they argue,
chiefly, that the district court abused its discretion when it ordered
the dismissal of one of the jurors pursuant to Rule 23(b) during the course
of jury deliberations. The court based its decision to remove the juror,
in large part, on a finding that the juror was purposefully disregarding
the court's instructions on the law--in effect, that the juror intended
to acquit the defendants regardless of the evidence of their guilt.
We consider below whether
a juror's intent to convict or acquit regardless of the evidence constitutes
a basis for the juror's removal during the course of deliberations under
Rule 23(b). We also consider what constitutes sufficient [*6] evidence
of that intent in light of the limitations on a presiding judge's authority
to investigate allegations of nullification required by the need to safeguard
the secrecy of jury deliberations. We conclude, inter alia, that--as an
obvious violation of a juror's oath and duty--a refusal to apply the law
as set forth by the court may constitute grounds for dismissal under Rule
23(b). We also hold that the importance of safeguarding the secrecy of
the jury deliberation room, coupled with the need to protect against the
dismissal of a juror based on his doubts about the guilt of a criminal
defendant, require that a juror be dismissed for a refusal to apply the
law as instructed only
where the record is clear beyond doubt that the juror is not, in fact,
simply unpersuaded by the prosecution's case. We conclude that the district
court erred in dismissing a juror, based largely on its finding that the
juror was
purposefully disregarding the court's instructions on the law, where the
record evidence raised the possibility that the juror's view on the merits
of the case was motivated by doubts about the defendants' guilt, rather
than by an intent
to nullify the law. Accordingly, we [*7] vacate the judgments of the district
court and remand for a new trial
I.
We have before us the consolidated
appeals of ten criminal defendants convicted of related conduct in two
trials held in the Northern District of New York. The named defendants
in this case, including those whose appeals we
consider here, were arrested on May 5, 1994. In an indictment returned
on May 13, 1994, they were charged with conspiracy to possess and distribute
cocaine and crack cocaine and actual possession and distribution of these
substances. A 30-count, superseding indictment was returned on October
14, 1994, which added a series of forfeiture counts against the defendants.
Ceasare Thomas, Myron Thomas,
Lamont Joseph, Santo Bolden, and Raymond Eaddy were tried on charges set
forth in the superseding indictment beginning on November 22, 1994. After
a Government witness apparently made certain
prejudicial statements on the stand, a mistrial was declared on November
28, 1994. A second trial of the same defendants began two days later, on
November 30, 1994, and the jury returned verdicts of guilty for all defendants
but Raymond Eaddy on December 14, 1994. We affirm these convictions in
a [*8] summary order filed today. See United States v. Thomas et al., Nos.
95-1337 et al. (2d Cir. May 20, 1997).
The remaining appellants, Grady Thomas, Ramse Thomas, Jason Thomas, Tracey Thomas, and Loray Thomas, along with Terrence Thomas, Shawne Thomas, Carrie Thomas, Stephon Russell, and Robert Gibson, were the subject of a separate trial, which began on January 18, 1995. n2 Grady Thomas, Ramse Thomas, Jason Thomas, Tracey Thomas, and Loray Thomas appeal from judgments of conviction entered against them following this trial, and we consider their appeals here.
n3 We confine our factual discussion of this trial to the events leading up to and including the ultimate dismissal of one of the jurors. These events provide the basis for the appellants' primary challenge to the proceedings below.
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n2 The court subsequently declared a mistrial with respect to Robert Gibson and granted Shawne Thomas's Rule 29 motion for a judgment of acquittal.
n3 Terrence Thomas and Carrie Thomas have not appealed their convictions.
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[*9]
* * *
During jury selection, the
Government attempted to exercise a peremptory challenge to a juror who
would later be empaneled as "Juror No. 5." Because the juror
was black--indeed, the only black person remaining as a potential juror
in a case in which, as the record indicates, all of the defendants are
black--defense counsel objected to the peremptory challenge under Batson
v. Kentucky, 476 U.S. 79, 90 L. Ed. 2d 69, 106 S. Ct. 1712 (1986), as racially
motivated. The Government responded that it wished to exclude the juror
based not on his race, but on the fact that he failed to make eye contact
with the Government's counsel during the voir dire. Although the district
court
explicitly found that the Government's peremptory challenge was not motivated
by race, the court, in a misapplication of Batson, n4 nevertheless denied
the challenge on the ground that the juror's failure to make eye contact
was an insufficient basis for his removal. The court would later explain
that Juror No. 5's status as the only black juror in a case involving black
defendants had motivated his decision to deny the Government's challenge.
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n4 Under Batson, the Government's burden is to "come forward with a neutral explanation for challenging black jurors." 476 U.S. at 97. In the instant case, the court found that the Government's peremptory challenge was not motivated by the race of the challenged juror. That finding should have been sufficient to sustain the Government's request to exercise its peremptory challenge of the juror. Juror No. 5 thus became a member of this jury as a result of the district court's erroneous decision in favor of the defendants.
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[*10]
Problems regarding Juror No.
5 did not end with his selection for the jury, however. During the course
of defense summations on Friday, February 17, 1995, following several weeks
of trial, a group of six jurors approached the
courtroom clerk to express their concerns about the juror. The six jurors
complained that Juror No. 5 was distracting them in court by squeaking
his shoe against the floor, rustling cough drop wrappers in his pocket,
and showing agreement with points made by defense counsel by slapping his
leg and, occasionally during the defense summations, saying "yeah,
yes."
Chief Judge McAvoy met with
counsel in chambers to discuss the complaints about Juror No. 5. The judge
raised the possibility of conducting interviews with each member of the
jury to determine the extent to which Juror No. 5 was
distracting them from their duties. Alternatively, he considered dismissing
Juror No. 5 in favor of an alternate juror pursuant to FED. R. CRIM. P.
24(c).
n5 While the Government approved
of the idea of interviewing the jurors, and dismissing Juror No. 5 if the
interviews revealed that his behavior was disturbing other members of the
jury, defense counsel generally opposed both
[*11] options, preferring that the court permit summations to continue
with only a general instruction to the jurors that they were not to form
any opinions before starting their deliberations. In the face of conflicting
recommendations from counsel on how to proceed, the judge dismissed the
jurors for the day, requesting that counsel submit memoranda of law over
the three-day weekend on an appropriate course of action. The court did,
however, instruct the jurors before dismissing them that they should not
yet "form any opinions or conclusions about the case."
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n5 FED. R. CIV. P. 24(c) provides, in pertinent part, that "alternate jurors . . . shall replace jurors who, prior to the time the jury retires to consider its verdict, become or are found to be unable or disqualified to perform their duties."
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The court received letter
briefs from the Government and from counsel for Ramse Thomas, dated February
17 and 20, 1995, respectively, on the proper course of action regarding
Juror No. 5. The Government recommended in its
[*12] brief that the court conduct in camera, on-the-record interviews
with the jurors (outside the presence of counsel to promote candid responses)
to determine whether there were grounds to dismiss Juror No. 5--specifically,
to
determine whether the juror "had been disruptive to the point where
the other jurors don't believe that they can deliberate with him, . . .
has formed opinions about the case that he has communicated to the other
jurors, or if
there is some other misconduct found which establishes that he is unable
to render a fair and impartial verdict." In his brief, counsel for
Ramse Thomas argued that the court should refrain from conducting any juror
interviews, urging that such an inquiry might bias members of the jury
against the defendants. He also objected to the dismissal of Juror No.
5.
When the jury returned from
the three-day weekend on Tuesday, February 21, the court followed the procedure
recommended by the Government. Without counsel present, the court conducted
in camera, on-the-record interviews with each juror to determine the extent
of any distraction resulting from Juror No. 5's behavior in the jury box.
Quite appropriately, the court began each interview [*13] with a general
inquiry as to whether anything had happened during the course of trial
that would interfere with the juror's ability to deliberate and decide
the case properly; the court did not ask about Juror No. 5's behavior unless
the interviewee first raised the issue. Although seven of the jurors indicated
that Juror No. 5 was a source of some distraction, all but one, who "thought
possibly" that she would experience problems during deliberations
because of Juror No. 5, anticipated nothing that would interfere
with their own ability to deliberate. For his part, Juror No. 5 explained
to the court that he sometimes got "carried away" in listening
to the attorneys' arguments, but he stated that he would have no difficulty
in applying the law
as set out by the court to the evidence presented at trial. He also assured
the court that he would "restrain himself" from engaging in any
further distracting behavior.
After completing his in camera
interviews, Chief Judge McAvoy met with trial counsel in chambers. He explained
that he had interviewed the jurors, briefly summarized the testimony he
had received in the interviews, and expressed his
intention, based on these interviews, [*14] to remove Juror No. 5 in favor
of one of the alternate jurors. The judge indicated that he was concerned
that Juror No. 5's behavior, especially in light of the court's own inquiries
of the
jurors, might place him in an adversarial relationship with his fellow
jurors as they began deliberations. The judge then sought comments from
each of theparties' counsel. The Government agreed with the court's proposal
to remove
Juror No. 5, but the proposed dismissal met with unanimous opposition from
defense counsel. Apparently persuaded by the defense's vigorous objections,
the judge reconsidered the matter and decided to retain Juror No. 5 on
the panel. Following the court's meeting with counsel, summations concluded,
and the court charged the jury that same day.
The jury deliberated throughout the day on February 22. On February 23, the courtroom clerk reported to the court, and then on the record to all counsel, that she had been approached on two separate occasions earlier in the day by jurors expressing concern over the course of their deliberations. Juror No. 1reportedly had indicated to the clerk that deliberations were likely to continue beyond February 23 because of a "problem with [*15] an unnamed juror." That same morning, Juror No. 12 had also reported to the clerk that "there was a problem . . . in the jury room [with] one of their number, and specifically . . . indicated [that] juror number five, had, at each time a vote was taken, voted not guilty and had indicated verbally that he would not change his mind." The court concluded, after hearing argument from counsel for the parties, that no action was immediately necessary; the court would "give it a little more time to see what develops."
Troubles in the jury room
seemed to escalate rapidly, however. On the following morning, February
24, the court received a note from Juror No. 6, apparently written only
on his own behalf. The note indicated that, due to Juror No. 5's "predisposed
disposition," the jury was unable to reach a verdict. Following an
off-the-record conversation with counsel for the parties, the court again
conducted in camera, on-the-record interviews with each of the jurors outside
the presence of counsel. This time, jurors focused their comments more
directly on Juror No. 5. Several mentioned the disruptive effect he was
having on the deliberations. One juror described him "hollering"
[*16] at fellow jurors, another said he had called his fellow jurors racists,
and two jurors told the court that Juror No. 5 had come close to striking
a fellow juror. The judge was also informed by a juror that, at one point,
Juror No. 5 pretended to vomit in the bathroom while other jurors were
eating lunch outside the bathroom door. The jurors, however, were not
unanimous in identifying Juror No. 5 as a source of disruption in the jury
room. One juror informed the judge that friction among the jurors had been
"pretty well ironed out," and another indicated that the other
jurors were in
fact "picking on" Juror No. 5.
Although the district court did not specifically inquire into any juror's position on the merits of the case, at least five of the jurors indicated that Juror No. 5 was unyieldingly in favor of acquittal for all of the defendants. The accounts differed, however, regarding the basis for Juror No. 5's position. On the one hand, one juror described Juror No. 5 as favoring acquittal because the defendants were his "people," another suggested that it was because Juror No. 5 thought the defendants were good people, two others stated that Juror No. 5 simply believed that drug [*17] dealing is commonplace, and another two jurors indicated that Juror No. 5 favored acquittal because he thought that the defendants had engaged in the alleged criminal activity out of economic necessity. On the other hand, several jurors recounted Juror No. 5 couching his position in terms of the evidence--one juror indicated specifically that Juror No. 5 was discussing the evidence, and four recalled him saying that the evidence, including the prosecution's witness testimony, was insufficient or unreliable. As for Juror No. 5, he said nothing in his interview with the court to suggest that he was not making a good faith effort to apply the law as instructed to the facts of the case. On the contrary, he informed the court that he needed "substantive evidence" establishing guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt" in order to convict.
After interviewing the jurors, the judge met in chambers with counsel for the parties. He had the record of the interviews read aloud and permitted counsel to comment on the appropriate course of action. The Government argued that the jurors' responses indicated that there was "almost a jury nullification issue pattern with [Juror No. 5]," and urged the court [*18] to order the juror's dismissal, while defense counsel unanimously opposed his removal. Having heard argument from counsel, the judge rendered his decision to remove Juror No. 5. He explained that he believed Juror No. 5 had become a "distraction" and a "focal point" for the jury's attention, and that his removal might "allow [the jury] to deliberate in a full and a fair fashion." The court cited Juror No. 5's failure to live up to his assurances regarding proper conduct, referring in particular to the allegation that he nearly struck another juror and to his feigned vomiting. Most importantly, however, the court found that Juror No. 5 was ignoring the evidence in favor of his own, preconceived ideas about the case:
I believe after hearing everything
that [Juror No. 5's] motives are immoral, that he believes that these folks
have a right to deal drugs, because they don't have any money, they are
in a disadvantaged situation and probably
that's the thing to do. And I don't think he would convict them no matter
what the evidence was.
The court found that Juror No. 5 was refusing to convict "because of preconceived, fixed, cultural, economic, [or] social . . . reasons [*19] that are totally improper and impermissible." The court then called Juror No. 5 into chambers to inform him of his dismissal and, that afternoon, announced the dismissal to the remaining jurors. Jurors were instructed that they were "to draw no inferences or conclusions whatsoever" from the removal and told that they were to start over in their deliberations.
On the afternoon of the following
Monday, February 27, 1995, the remaining eleven jurors returned a verdict.
They found the defendants Grady, Ramse, Tracy, and Terrence Thomas guilty
on all counts, Jason Thomas guilty on three
of the four counts against him, and Carrie and Loray Thomas each guilty
on a conspiracy count. The jury deadlocked on the fourth count against
Jason Thomas and acquitted Carrie and Loray Thomas of possession with intent
to distribute a controlled substance. Stephon Russell was acquitted of
conspiracy to distribute and to possess with intent to distribute, the
only count with which he had been charged.
Ramse, Tracey, Loray, Grady, and Jason Thomas here appeal from the judgment of conviction. As their chief argument on appeal, each of these defendants challenges the dismissal of Juror No. 5.
II. [*20]
The district court dismissed Juror No. 5 pursuant to FED. R. CRIM. P. 23(b), which provides, in pertinent part, that where "the court finds it necessary to excuse a juror for just cause after the jury has retired to consider its verdict, in the discretion of the court a valid verdict may be returned by the remaining 11 jurors." We review the district court's exercise of this authority for abuse of discretion. See, e.g., United States v. Reese, 33 F.3d 166, 173 (2d Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 130 L. Ed. 2d 655, 115 S. Ct. 756 (1995); United States v. Casamento, 887 F.2d 1141, 1187 (2d Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 1081, 107 L. Ed. 2d 1043, 110 S. Ct. 1138 (1990).
To determine whether the court
erred in dismissing Juror No. 5, we must first decide whether the district
court's primary basis for the dismissal--the juror's intention to disregard
the applicable criminal laws--constitutes "just cause" for his
removal under Rule 23(b). In holding that a presiding judge has a duty
to dismiss a juror who purposefully disregards the court's instructions
on the law, we briefly review the factors that courts have traditionally
considered to be "just cause" for dismissal pursuant to Rule
23(b), and discuss the dangers inherent [*21] in so-called nullification.
Having
concluded that a deliberating juror bent on nullification may be dismissed
for "just cause," we next consider whether the district court
in this case had a sufficient evidentiary basis for concluding that Juror
No. 5 was purposefully
disregarding the court's instructions on the law.
A. Dismissal of a Juror During Deliberations: Rule 23(b) and Factors that Traditionally Constitute "Just Cause"
In evaluating the district
court's decision to remove Juror No. 5 pursuant to Rule 23(b), we must
first decide whether the reasons that the court cited as grounds for the
removal constitute "just cause" as that term is employed in the
rule. We consider, in particular, the district court's primary ground for
dismissal--that Juror No. 5 refused to apply the law as set out in the
court's instructions. n6 Whether a juror's defiance of the court's instructions
on the law constitutes "just cause" for that juror's removal
under Rule 23(b) is apparently a question of first impression in this Circuit.
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n6 We wish to make clear that
nothing in this opinion is intended to suggest that jurors who deliberate
under a good faith misinterpretation of the law as instructed by the court
are subject to dismissal. In this case we address only
the applicability of Rule 23(b) where a juror is alleged to be acting in
purposeful disregard of the court's instructions.
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[*22]
Language was added in 1983 to Rule 23(b) to provide a court with the unilateral authority to remove jurors during the course of deliberations. Prior to that time, Rule 23(b) required the consent of all parties in order for the trial court to dismiss one or more jurors, and to allow the remaining jurors to proceed to a verdict. n7 As explained in the Note of the Advisory Committee on the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure ("Advisory Committee"), the 1983 amendment was a response to cases in which, after a trial of significant length and involving substantial expense, a juror became "seriously incapacitated or [was] otherwise found to be unable to continue service upon the jury." FED. R. CRIM. P. 23(b) Advisory Committee's Note ("Advisory Committee Note"); see United States v. Gabay, 923 F.2d 1536, 1543 (11th Cir. 1991) (noting that, in that case, "a mistrial would have necessitated a second expenditure of substantial prosecution, defense and court resources . . . the outcome Rule 23(b) was designed to alleviate"). The amendment provides an alternative short of mistrial in such cases, and it does so without calling for the use of alternate jurors once deliberations have begun, [*23] an option that the Advisory Committee expressly rejected. Advisory Committee Note; see also United States v. Gambino, 788 F.2d 938, 948-49 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 825, 93 L. Ed. 2d 49, 107 S. Ct. 98 (1986).
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n7 Rule 23(b) continues to provide for the elimination of one or more jurors by stipulation. See supra note 1.
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Since the adoption of the
1983 amendment, federal courts have exercised their unilateral authority
to dismiss jurors during the course of deliberations for a variety of reasons.
Often, courts employ Rule 23(b) in cases, like those described in the Advisory
Committee Note, where a juror is incapacitated or has otherwise become
unavailable during the course of deliberations. See, e.g., Reese, 33 F.3d
at 172-73 (juror leaving for business trip); United States v. Wilson, 894
F.2d 1245, 1249-51 (11th Cir.) (juror became ill), cert. denied, 497 U.S.
1029 (1990); United States v. Armijo, 834
F.2d 132, 134 (8th Cir. 1987) (juror in car accident), cert. denied, 485
U.S. 990, 99 L. Ed. 2d 507, 108 S. Ct. 1297 (1988); United States [*24]
v. Molinares Charris, 822 F.2d 1213, 1222-23 (1st Cir. 1987) (juror was
"nervous and upset," had been crying during deliberations, and
had taken tranquilizer); United States v. Stratton, 779 F.2d 820, 830-31
(2d Cir. 1985) (juror unable to deliberate on religious holiday), cert.
denied, 476 U.S. 1162, 90 L. Ed. 2d 726, 106 S. Ct. 2285 (1986).
"Just cause" is
not limited to instances of juror illness or unavailability, however. Courts
have also found "just cause" to dismiss jurors who, although
available and physically capable of serving, are nonetheless found to be
unable to perform their duties properly. In particular, Rule 23(b) dismissals
have been upheld repeatedly in cases where the trial court found that a
juror was no longer capable of rendering an impartial verdict. These cases
have involved
instances of jurors who felt threatened by one of the parties, see United
States v. Ruggiero, 928 F.2d 1289, 1300 (2d Cir.) (juror "disabled
by fear" after receiving what he thought was threat from defendant),
cert. denied sub nom. Gotti v. United States, 502 U.S. 938, 116 L. Ed.
2d 324, 112 S. Ct. 372 (1991); Casamento, 887 F.2d at 1186-87 (juror fearful
after daughter received threatening phone call), who are discovered to
have a [*25] relationship with one of the parties, see United States v.
Barone, 846 F. Supp. 1016, 1018-19 (D. Mass. 1994) (juror who was informed
that defense attorney had represented his cousin deemed unable to "render
a fair and impartial verdict"), or whose life circumstances otherwise
change during the course of deliberations in such a way that they are no
longer considered capable of
rendering an impartial verdict, see United States v. Egbuniwe, 969 F.2d
757, 762-63 (9th Cir. 1992) (juror "might not be able to be fair to
both parties" after learning that girlfriend had been arrested and
mistreated by police).
B. Nullification as "Just Cause" for Dismissal
In the instant case, the judge
identified a different form of bias as the primary ground for dismissing
Juror No. 5--one arising not from an external event or from a relationship
between a juror and a party, but rather, from a more general opposition
to the application of the criminal narcotics laws to the defendants' conduct.
In the court's view, Juror No. 5 believed that the defendants had "a
right to deal drugs." Based on what the court described as
the juror's "preconceived, fixed, cultural, economic, [or] social
[*26] . . . reasons that are totally improper and impermissible,"
the court concluded that Juror No. 5 was unlikely to convict the defendants
"no matter what the
evidence was." Essentially, the judge found that Juror No. 5 intended
to engage in a form of "nullification," a practice whereby a
juror votes in purposeful disregard of the evidence, defying the court's
instructions on the law.
We take this occasion to restate some basic principles regarding the character of our jury system. Nullification is, by definition, a violation of a juror's oath to apply the law as instructed by the court--in the words of the standard oath administered to jurors in the federal courts, to "render a true verdict according to the law and the evidence." FEDERAL JUDICIAL CENTER, BENCHBOOK FOR U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGES 225 (4th ed. 1996) (emphasis supplied). n8 We categorically reject the idea that, in a society committed to the rule of law, jury nullification is desirable or that courts may permit it to occur when it is within their authority to prevent. Accordingly, we conclude that a juror who intends to nullify the applicable law is no less subject to dismissal than is a juror who disregards the court's [*27] instructions due to an event or relationship that renders him biased or otherwise unable to render a fair and impartial verdict.
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n8 This same language was included in the oath administered to the jurors in the instant case.
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We are mindful that the term
"nullification" can cover a number of distinct, though related,
phenomena, encompassing in one word conduct that takes place for a variety
of different reasons; jurors may nullify, for example, because of the identity
of a party, a disapprobation of the particular prosecution at issue, or
a more general opposition to the applicable criminal law or laws. We recognize,
too, that nullification may at times manifest itself as a form of civil
disobedience that some may regard as tolerable. The case of John Peter
Zenger, the publisher of the New York Weekly Journal acquitted of criminal
libel in 1735, and the nineteenth-century acquittals in prosecutions under
the fugitive slave laws, are perhaps our country's most renowned examples
of "benevolent" nullification. [*28] See United States v. Dougherty,
154 U.S. App. D.C. 76, 473 F.2d 1113, 1130 (D.C. Cir. 1972) (Leventhal,
J.); see also
David Farnham, Jury Nullification: History Proves It's Not a New Idea,
CRIM. JUST., Winter 1997, at 4, 6-7.
More generally, the very institution of trial by jury in a criminal case, as Judge Learned Hand observed, "introduces a slack into the enforcement of law, tempering its rigor by the mollifying influence of current ethical conventions." U.S. ex rel. McCann v. Adams, 126 F.2d 774, 776 (2d Cir.), rev'd on other grounds, 317 U.S. 269, 87 L. Ed. 268, 63 S. Ct. 236 (1942). This is so because, as Judge Hand explained, "the individual can forfeit his liberty--to say nothing of his life--only at the hands of those who, unlike any official, are in no wise accountable, directly or indirectly, for what they do, and who at once separate and melt anonymously in the community from which they came. . . . Since if they acquit their verdict is final, no one is likely to suffer of whose conduct they do not morally disapprove . . . ." Id. at 775-76.
As courts have long recognized,
several features of our jury trial system act to protect the jury's power
to acquit, regardless of the evidence, when the prosecution's [*29] case
meets with the jury's "moral[] disapproval." Since
the famous opinion in Bushell's Case, 124 Eng. Rep. 1006 (C.P. 1670), freeing
a member of the jury arrested for voting to acquit William Penn against
the weight of the evidence, nullifying jurors have been protected from
being called to account for their verdicts. Moreover, and in addition to
the courts' duty to safeguard the secrecy of the jury deliberation room
(discussed in greater detail below), the several rules protecting the unassailability
of jury verdicts of acquittal--even where these verdicts are inconsistent
with other verdicts rendered by the same jury in the same case, United
States v. Carbone, 378 F.2d 420, 423 (2d Cir.) (Friendly, J.) (recognizing
link between upholding inconsistent verdicts and protecting juries' power
of lenity), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 914, 19 L. Ed. 2d 262, 88 S. Ct. 242
(1967)--serve to
"permit[] juries to acquit out of compassion or compromise or because
of their assumption of a power which they had no right to exercise, but
to which they were disposed through lenity." Standefer v. United States,
447 U.S. 10, 22, 64
L. Ed. 2d 689, 100 S. Ct. 1999 (1980) (internal quotation marks omitted).
But as the quotation from
the Supreme Court's [*30] opinion in Standefer indicates, in language originally
employed by Judge Learned Hand, the power of juries to "nullify"
or exercise a power of lenity is just that--a power; it is by no means
a right or something that a judge should encourage or permit if it is within
his authority to prevent. Indeed, although nullification has a long history
in the Anglo-American legal system, see Dougherty, 473 F.2d at 1130-33;
Farnham, supra, at 4, and the federal courts have long noted the de facto
power of a jury to render general verdicts "in the teeth of both law
and facts," Horning v. District of Columbia, 254 U.S. 135, 138, 65
L. Ed. 185, 41 S. Ct. 53 (1920); see, e.g., United States v. Trujillo,
714 F.2d 102, 105-06 (11th Cir. 1983), courts have consistently recognized
that jurors have no right to nullify. See, e.g., United States v. Kerley,
838 F.2d 932, 938 (7th Cir. 1988) ("Jury nullification is just a power,
not also a right . . . ."); see also Sparf v. United States, 156 U.S.
51, 102, 39 L. Ed. 343, 15 S. Ct. 273 (1895) (holding that, while juries
are finders of fact, "it is the duty of juries in criminal cases to
take the law from the court and apply that law to the facts as they find
them"). As a [*31] panel of the Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit--composed of Chief Judge Spottswood W. Robinson, III,
Judge George E. MacKinnon, and then-Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg--explained:
A jury has no more "right" to find a "guilty" defendant "not guilty" than it has to find a "not guilty" defendant "guilty," and the fact that the former cannot be corrected by a court, while the latter can be, does not create a right out of the power to misapply the law. Such verdicts are lawless, a denial of due process and constitute an exercise of erroneously seized power.
United States v. Washington,
227 U.S. App. D.C. 184, 705 F.2d 489, 494 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (per curiam)
(emphasis in original). Indeed, as we noted above, the exercise of this
de facto power is a violation of a juror's sworn duty to
"apply the law as interpreted by the court." United States v.
Boardman, 419 F.2d 110, 116 (1st Cir. 1969), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 991,
25 L. Ed. 2d 398, 90 S. Ct. 1124 (1970). n9
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n9 Accordingly, criminal defendants
have no right to a jury instruction alerting jurors to this power to act
in contravention of their duty. See United States v. Edwards, 101 F.3d
17, 19-20 (2d Cir. 1996) (citing cases); see also
United States v. Sepulveda, 15 F.3d 1161, 1190 (1st Cir. 1993), cert. denied,
512 U.S. 1223, 114 S. Ct. 2714, 129 L. Ed. 2d 840 (1994); Dougherty, 473
F.2d at 1136-37. As the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit recognized,
to instruct on nullification "would . . . undermine[] the impartial
determination of justice based on law." United States v. Krzyske,
836 F.2d 1013, 1021 (6th Cir.) (finding no error in court's response to
jury inquiry on nullification that included the admonition to the jury:
"You would violate your oath and the law if you willfully brought
in a verdict contrary to the law given you in this case."), cert.
denied, 488 U.S. 832, 102 L. Ed. 2d 65, 109 S. Ct. 89 (1988).
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[*32]
Moreover, although the early history of our country includes the occasional Zenger trial or acquittals in fugitive slave cases, more recent history presents numerous and notorious examples of jurors nullifying--cases that reveal the destructive potential of a practice Professor Randall Kennedy of the Harvard Law School has rightly termed a "sabotage of justice." Randall Kennedy, The Angry Juror, WALL ST. J., Sept. 30, 1994, at A12. Consider, for example, the two hung juries in the 1964 trials of Byron De La Beckwith in Mississippi for the murder of NAACP field secretary Medgar Evers, or the 1955 acquittal of J.W. Millam and Roy Bryant for the murder of fourteen-year-old Emmett Till, see DAVID HALBERSTAM, THE FIFTIES 431-41 (1993); JUAN WILLIAMS, EYES ON THE PRIZE: AMERICA'S CIVIL RIGHTS YEARS, 1954-1965, at 38-57, 221-25 (1987)--shameful examples of how "nullification" has been used to sanction murder and lynching.
Inasmuch as no juror has a
right to engage in nullification--and, on the contrary, it is a violation
of a juror's sworn duty to follow the law as instructed by the court--trial
courts have the duty to forestall or prevent such conduct, whether by firm
instruction [*33] or admonition or, where permitted, by dismissal of an
offending juror from the venire or the jury. If it is true that the jury's
"prerogative of lenity," Dougherty, 473 F.2d at 1133, introduces
"a slack into the enforcement of law, tempering its rigor by the mollifying
influence of current ethical conventions," Adams, 126 F.2d at
776, then, as part and parcel of the system of checks and balances embedded
in the very structure of the American criminal trial, there is a countervailing
duty and authority of the judge to assure that jurors follow the law. Although
nullification may sometimes succeed--because, inter alia, it does not come
to the attention of a presiding judge before the completion of a jury's
work, and jurors are not answerable for nullification after the verdict
has been
reached--it would be a dereliction of duty for a judge to remain indifferent
to reports that a juror is intent on violating his oath. This is true regardless
of the juror's motivation for "nullification," including race,
ethnicity or similar considerations. A federal judge, whose own oath of
office requires the judge to "faithfully and impartially discharge
and perform all the duties incumbent [*34] upon [the judge] . . . under
the Constitution and laws of the United States," 28 U.S.C. @ 453 (1994),
may not ignore colorable claims that a juror is acting on the basis of
such improper
considerations.
Accordingly, every day in
courtrooms across the length and breadth of this country, jurors are dismissed
from the venire "for cause" precisely because they are unwilling
or unable to follow the applicable law. n10 Indeed, one of
the principal purposes of voir dire is to ensure that the jurors ultimately
selected for service are unbiased and willing and able to apply the law
as instructed by the court to the evidence presented by the parties.
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n10 The Federal Judicial Center's Benchbook for U.S. District Court Judges includes the following among its list of standard voir dire questions to prospective jurors:
If you are selected to sit on this case, will you be able to render a verdict solely on the evidence presented at the trial and in the context of the law as I will give it to you in my instructions, disregarding any other ideas, notions, or beliefs about the law that you may have encountered in reaching your verdict
BENCHBOOK FOR U.S. DISTRICT COURT JUDGES, supra, at 93 (emphasis supplied).
A widely discussed example of the use of voir dire to eliminate jurors likely to nullify the law is the selection of "death qualified" juries in capital cases. Jurors are excluded whose responses at voir dire indicate that their views on capital punishment "would prevent or substantially impair the performance of [their] duties as . . . jurors in accordance with [their] instructions and [their] oath." Adams v. Texas, 448 U.S. 38, 45, 65 L. Ed. 2d 581, 100 S. Ct. 2521 (1980); see also Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U.S. 510, 513-14, 20 L. Ed. 2d 776, 88 S. Ct. 1770 (1968).
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[*35]
So also, a presiding judge possesses both the responsibility and the authority to dismiss a juror whose refusal or unwillingness to follow the applicable law becomes known to the judge during the course of trial. Rule 24(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides for the substitution of alternates for "jurors who, prior to the time the jury retires to consider its verdict, become or are found to be unable or disqualified to perform their duties." Surely a juror is "unable or disqualified," for purposes of this rule, who is intent on nullifying the applicable law and thereby violating his oath to "render a true verdict according to the law and the evidence."
Similarly, we conclude that
a juror who is determined to ignore his duty, who refuses to follow the
court's instructions on the law and who thus threatens to "undermine[]
the impartial determination of justice based on law," Krzyske, 836
F.2d at 1021, is subject to dismissal during the course of deliberations
under Rule 23(b). This conclusion reinforces the court's inherent authority
to conduct inquiries in response to reports of improper juror conduct and
to determine whether a juror is unwilling to carry [*36] out his duties
faithfully and impartially. The rule we adopt applies with
equal force whether the juror's refusal to follow the court's instructions
results from a desire to "nullify" the applicable law or, for
example, as in the cases described above, see supra p. 17, from a perceived
physical threat or from a relationship with one of the parties.
Our position in this respect
is in accord with that of the Eleventh Circuit. See United States v. Geffrard,
87 F.3d 448, 450-52 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 136 L. Ed. 2d 339, 117 S.
Ct. 442, 117 S. Ct. 443 (1996). In Geffrard, a juror submitted a letter
to the court during the course of deliberations in which she stated that
she adhered to the Christian teachings of Emanuel Swedenborg. Under Swedenborg's
theology, the juror explained, she could not "'live with a verdict
of guilty for any of the accused on any of the charges, as [she] believed
deep within [her] heart and soul and mind that [the defendants] were unjustly
led into this so called transaction by a more intelligent and powerful
figure.'"
Id. at 451. The juror was convinced, assertedly as a result of her religious
beliefs, that the defendants were the victims of governmental entrapment,
[*37] notwithstanding the fact that the court had earlier instructed the
jury that entrapment was not at issue in the case. Id. The juror in Geffrard
thus was prepared purposefully to disregard or ignore--to "nullify"--the
law as set forth in the court's instructions to the jury. The district
court "saw in the letter an inability of the juror to follow the court's
instructions on the law." Id. Accordingly, the court dismissed the
juror pursuant to Rule 23(b), and the remaining eleven jurors convicted
the defendants. The Court of Appeals upheld the dismissal, reasoning that
the juror's letter "[made] it a certainty that this particular juror
could not reach a verdict following the judge's instructions as applied
to the facts." Id. at 452.
We agree that a juror's purposeful refusal to apply the law as set forth in a jury charge constitutes an appropriate basis for that juror's removal. Nor is this conclusion any less valid, in the instant case, in light of Juror No. 5's race. The rule authorizing dismissal of a juror who disregards the law does not include an exception for jurors who violate their sworn duty on the basis of racial or ethnic interests or affinities. Accordingly, [*38] the district court's finding that Juror No. 5 was unlikely to convict the defendants "no matter what the evidence" was a proper basis for the exercise of the court's dismissal authority, provided that the court had a sufficient evidentiary basis for this finding. As we explain below, however, the need to safeguard the secrecy of jury deliberations requires the use of a high evidentiary standard for the dismissal of a deliberating juror for purposeful disobedience of a court's instructions, a standard that the record in the instant case fails to meet.
C. Jury Secrecy and the Investigation of Alleged Juror Impropriety
The extent to which a presiding
judge may investigate alleged juror bias or misconduct differs depending
on when the investigation takes place. In particular, and as we explain
below, a district court's authority to investigate allegations of juror
impropriety necessarily becomes more limited once the jury has begun to
deliberate. Once a jury retires to the deliberation room, the presiding
judge's duty to dismiss jurors for misconduct comes into
conflict with a duty that is equally, if not more, important--safeguarding
the secrecy of jury deliberations. This [*39] conflict is especially pronounced
here, where the alleged misbehavior is a purposeful disregard of the law,
a
particularly difficult allegation to prove and one for which an effort
to act in good faith may easily be mistaken.
In the instant case, the defendants
do not directly challenge the proposition that a juror's refusal to follow
the court's instructions on the law may be a proper basis for removal under
Rule 23(b), but they do contest the court's finding of fact that Juror
No. 5 was unwilling to apply the law as instructed. The defendants contend
that the record provides ample evidence to demonstrate that Juror No. 5
simply remained unpersuaded by the Government's case. See Brief for Defendant-Appellant
Grady Thomas at 13, 16-17; Brief for Defendant-Appellant Loray Thomas at
18, 20; Brief for Defendant-Appellant Ramse Thomas at 26, 28; Brief for
Defendant Appellant Tracey Thomas at 11; Brief for Defendant-Appellant
Jason Thomas at 4-5. In addition, two of the defendants argue that the
very procedures employed by the district court to investigate reports of
Juror No. 5's misconduct--the two sets of in camera
interviews with members of the jury (in the absence of counsel [*40] and,
on at least the first occasion, over the objection of defense counsel)--are
themselves grounds for reversal insofar as they unduly intruded into the
jury's deliberative process. See Brief for Defendant-Appellant Grady Thomas
at 18-21; Brief for Defendant-Appellant Ramse Thomas at 20-23. As these
claims are inextricably related, we consider them together below. First,
however, it is important to restate the importance of secrecy in jury deliberations.
1. Safeguarding the Secrecy of Jury Deliberations
Courts face a delicate and
complex task whenever they undertake to investigate reports of juror misconduct
or bias during the course of a trial. This undertaking is particularly
sensitive, where, as here, the court endeavors to investigate allegations
of juror misconduct during deliberations. As a general rule, no one--including
the judge presiding at a trial--has a "right to know" how a jury,
or any individual juror, has deliberated or how a decision was reached
by a jury or juror. The secrecy of deliberations is the cornerstone of
the modern Anglo-American jury system. Courts and commentators alike recognize
that the secrecy of deliberations is essential to the proper functioning
[*41] of juries. It is well understood that disclosure of the substance
of jury deliberations may undermine public confidence in the jury
system, see Note, Public Disclosures of Jury Deliberations, 96 HARV. L.
REV. 886, 889 (1983) ("Public Disclosures"), and poses a threat
to adjudicatory finality. Especially troublesome is the danger that such
disclosure presents to the operation of the deliberative process itself.
As one commentator has observed:
Juror privacy is a prerequisite
of free debate, without which the decisionmaking process would be crippled.
The precise value of throwing together in a jury room a representative
cross-section of the community is that a just consensus is reached through
a thoroughgoing exchange of ideas and impressions. For the process to work
according to theory, the participants must feel completely free to dissect
the credibility, motivations, and just
deserts of other people. Sensitive jurors will not engage in such a dialogue
without some assurance that it will never reach a larger audience.
Id. (footnotes omitted). "Freedom
of debate," as Justice Cardozo wrote, "might be stifled and independence
of thought checked if jurors [*42] were made to feel that their arguments
and ballots were to be freely published to the
world." Clark v. United States, 289 U.S. 1, 13, 77 L. Ed. 993, 53
S. Ct. 465 (1933); see also United States v. Antar, 38 F.3d 1348, 1367
(3d Cir. 1994) (Rosenn, J., concurring) ("We must bear in mind that
the confidentiality of the thought processes of jurors, their privileged
exchange of views, and the freedom to be candid in their deliberations
are the soul of the jury system."); In re Globe Newspaper Co., 920
F.2d 88, 94 (1st Cir. 1990) ("It is undisputed that the secrecy of
jury deliberations fosters free, open and candid debate in reaching a decision.");
Abraham S. Goldstein, Jury Secrecy
and the Media: The Problem of Postverdict Interviews, 1993 U. ILL. L. REV.
295, 295 ("Jurors must deliberate in secret so that they may communicate
freely with one another, secure in the knowledge that what they say will
not be passed along to others."); Benjamin S. DuVal, Jr., The Occasions
of Secrecy, 47 U. PITT. L. REV. 579, 646 (1986) ("The secrecy of the
jury room, like that of the Supreme Court conference, is designed to promote
the free and candid interchange of views.").
The history of Anglo-American [*43] law and common experience in our own time lend little or no support to the occasional suggestion, see, e.g., Mary Strauss, Juror Journalism, 12 YALE L. & POL'Y REV. 389, 404-05 (1994), that public scrutiny of how jurors reach their decisions may improve the quality of jury deliberations. In cases that generate much attention or passion in the community, or which involve allegedly dangerous persons or organizations, the suggestion that the views of jurors may be conveyed to the parties and the public, even after the trial is over, understandably may cause anxiety and fear in jurors, and distort the process by which a verdict is reached; actually making such information available to the public might invite the retribution that jurors would rightly fear.
The jury system incorporated in our Constitution by the Framers was not intended to satisfy yearnings for perfect knowledge of how a verdict is reached, nor to provide assurances to the public of the primacy of logic in human affairs. Nor was it subordinated to a "right to know" found in the First Amendment. The jury as we know it is supposed to reach its decisions in the mystery and security of secrecy; objections to the [*44] secrecy of jury deliberations are nothing less than objections to the jury system itself.
Because the rule of secrecy is fundamental to the effective operation of the jury system, it is not surprising that courts have been concerned to maintain the confidentiality of the process even after a verdict has been returned and the jury has been formally discharged. It is the historic duty of a trial judge to safeguard the secrecy of the deliberative process that lies at the heart of our system of justice, even in the face of relentless, and sometimes inappropriate, demands by the news media and the public for post-verdict disclosure of what went on behind the closed door of the jury room. See, e.g., Antar, 38 F.3d at 1364 (Rosenn, J., concurring) (noting "the historic efforts of the courts to protect the confidentiality of a jury's deliberative process"); id. at 1367 (stating that juror deliberations "must be zealously guarded from any impermissible encroachment if the [jury] system is to survive").
Today, it is common--and entirely
appropriate--for a conscientious trial judge to advise jurors against disclosing
the substance of their deliberations after the end of [*45] a trial. See
Globe Newspapers Co., 920 F.2d at 94-95 ("It has . . . been a common
and, we believe, wise custom for trial judges to advise jurors . . . that
they are not only free to refuse to disclose what went on in the jury room,
but that they may well think it better and more prudent to decline to discuss
what has occurred."). At times, courts quite properly go further than
this to protect the secrecy of deliberations, imposing strict limitations
on what jurors are permitted to disclose. See, e.g., United States v. Harrelson,
713 F.2d 1114, 1118 (5th Cir. 1983) (upholding trial court restriction
on juror interviews, including requirement that "no interviewer may
inquire into the specific vote of any juror other than the juror being
interviewed"), cert. denied sub nom. El Paso Times, Inc. v. United
States Dist. Ct. for the W. Dist. of Tx., 465 U.S. 1041, 79 L. Ed. 2d 714,
104 S. Ct. 1318
(1984). In addition, many federal judicial districts have enacted rules
that subject post-verdict juror interviews to judicial supervision. See
Public Disclosures, supra, at 901 & n.93 (citing rules from 26 federal
districts). While these rules often apply only to parties and their counsel,
some federal districts [*46] have adopted rules that extend the court's
supervisory authority to any post-verdict interviews of jurors. Id. at
901 & n.95; see, e.g., D. CONN. R. CIV. P. 12(e)(1) (incorporated by
reference into criminal rules pursuant to D. CONN. R. CRIM. P. 1) ("No
juror shall respond to any
inquiry as to the deliberations or vote of the jury or of any other individual
juror, except on leave of Court which shall be granted only upon the showing
of good cause." (emphasis supplied)). None of this is to suggest that
we cannot do more to protect the secrecy of deliberations. One eminent
authority, for example, has proposed a statute imposing criminal sanctions
on jurors who disclose information about their deliberations, as well as
on anyone who seeks such disclosure, without permission of the court. See
Goldstein, supra, at 308-10.
2. Investigating Alleged Juror Misconduct During Deliberations
Protecting the deliberative
process requires not only a vigilant watch against external threats to
juror secrecy, but also strict limitations on intrusions from those who
participate in the trial process itself, including counsel and the presiding
judge. A court must limit its own [*47] inquiries of jurors once deliberations
have begun. As the district court observed in the instant case, the very
act of judicial investigation can at times be expected to foment discord
among jurors. See supra p. 10. In particular, a presiding judge is extremely
limited in the extent to which he may investigate the reasons underlying
a juror's position on the merits of a case. United States v. Brown, 262
U.S. App. D.C. 183, 823 F.2d 591, 596 (D.C. Cir. 1987) ("[A] court
may not delve deeply into a juror's motivations because it may not
intrude on the secrecy of the jury's deliberations."). The mental
processes of a deliberating juror with respect to the merits of the case
at hand must remain largely beyond examination and second-guessing, shielded
from scrutiny
by the court as much as from the eyes and ears of the parties and the public.
Were a district judge permitted to conduct intrusive inquiries into--and
make extensive findings of fact concerning--the reasoning behind a juror's
view of
the case, or the particulars of a juror's (likely imperfect) understanding
or interpretation of the law as stated by the judge, this would not only
seriously breach the principle of the secrecy of jury deliberations, [*48]
but it would invite trial judges to second-guess and influence the work
of the jury.
In many cases, a presiding
judge is able to determine whether there is "just cause" to dismiss
a deliberating juror without any inquiry into the juror's thoughts on the
merits of the case. Evidence of the nature and extent of a
juror's unavailability, see Reese, 33 F.3d at 172-73 (business trip); Stratton,
779 F.2d at 830-31 (religious holiday), or incapacitation, see Wilson,
894 F.2d at 1249-51 (juror ill), for example, is ordinarily available without
inquiring into the substance of deliberations. In such instances, the judge
is free to conduct a thorough examination of the basis for removal--a basis
that is itself unlikely to be confused with a juror's views of the sufficiency
of theevidence--and to make appropriate findings of fact, including determinations
of the credibility of the juror in question.
The need to protect the secrecy of jury deliberations begins to limit the court's investigatory powers where the asserted basis for a deliberating juror's possible dismissal is the juror's alleged bias or partiality in joining or not joining the views of his colleagues. As the examples [*49] set forth in Section II.A reveal, however, claims of partiality or bias often arise from some event, or from a relationship between a juror and a party, that is both easily identifiable and subject to investigation without intrusion into the deliberative process. In Ruggiero, for example, the juror in question testified that he had received what he took to be a physical threat from one of the defendants. 928 F.2d at 1300. Likewise, in Casamento, a juror's daughter had received a threatening phone call. 887 F.2d at 1186-87. Although the jurors dismissed for bias in Barone and Egbuniwe had not been the subject of threats, the source of their possible bias was similarly subject to ready identification. See Barone, 846 F. Supp. at 1018-19 (defense attorney had represented juror's cousin); Egbuniwe, 969 F.2d at 762-63 (during course of deliberations, juror learned that girlfriend had been arrested and mistreated by police).
In cases such as these, the
presiding judge can make appropriate findings and establish whether a juror
is biased or otherwise unable to serve without delving into the reasons
underlying the juror's views on the merits of the case. When an event [*50]
or a relationship itself becomes a subject of investigation, the trial
court may consider the likelihood that it will prejudice or otherwise disable
the juror or jurors in question. Moreover, to the extent that in some of
these cases the court is investigating whether a juror has become distracted
or agitated following a particular incident, the court is able to rely
on its assessment of the demeanor of the juror in question. Such cases
may thus come to resemble those involving juror incapacitation. See Ruggiero,
928 F.2d at 1300 (juror "disabled by fear"). In
Casamento, for example, Judge Leval, then sitting in the district court,
quite appropriately weighed the juror's assurance that the threatening
phone call received by her daughter had not "affected [her] ability
to think or to judge in any way," against both the nature of the incident
and the juror's observable agitation. United States v. Badalamenti, 663
F. Supp. 1539, 1540-41 (S.D.N.Y. 1987), aff'd, Casamento, 887 F.2d at 1187.
Judge Leval grounded his
decision to dismiss her from the jury on the finding that "[a] threat
to the safety of one's child . . . cannot be put out of mind or disregarded,"
and [*51] the fact that the juror "was obviously worried, troubled
and upset, and repeatedly said so." Id.
Where, however, as here, a
presiding judge receives reports that a deliberating juror is intent on
defying the court's instructions on the law, the judge may well have no
means of investigating the allegation without unduly breaching the secrecy
of deliberations. There is no allegedly prejudicial event or relationship
at issue, nor is the court being asked to assess whether a juror is so
upset or otherwise distracted that he is unable to carry out his duties.
Rather, to determine whether a juror is bent on defiant disregard of the
applicable law, the court would generally need to intrude into the juror's
thought processes. Such an investigation must be subject to strict limitations.
Without such an inquiry, however, the court will have little evidence with
which to make the often difficult distinction between the juror who favors
acquittal because he is purposefully disregarding the court's instructions
on the law, and the juror who is simply unpersuaded by the Government's
evidence. Yet this distinction is a critical one, for to remove a juror
because he is unpersuaded by the Government's [*52] case is to deny the
defendant his right to a unanimous verdict. See Brown, 823 F.2d at 596.
In a case involving a juror's own request to be dismissed from duty because
of what the
prosecution understood to be an unwillingness to apply the law as instructed,
Judge Mikva, in an opinion joined by Judge Bork and Judge Douglas H. Ginsburg,
observed:
[A] court may not delve deeply into a juror's motivations because it may not intrude on the secrecy of the jury's deliberations. Thus, unless the initial request for [a juror's] dismissal is transparent, the court will likely prove unable to establish conclusively the reasons underlying it. Given these circumstances, we must hold that if the record evidence discloses any possibility that the request to discharge stems from the juror's view of the sufficiency of the government's evidence, the court must deny the request.
Id. (emphasis supplied).
We adopt the Brown rule as
an appropriate limitation on a juror's dismissal in any case where the
juror allegedly refuses to follow the law--whether the juror himself requests
to be discharged from duty or, as in the instant case,
fellow jurors raise allegations [*53] of this form of misconduct. Given
the necessary limitations on a court's investigatory authority in cases
involving a juror's alleged refusal to follow the law, a lower evidentiary
standard would lead to the removal of jurors on the basis of their view
of the sufficiency of the prosecution's evidence.
Consider a case where, for example, a strong majority of the jury favors conviction, but a small set of jurors--perhaps just one--disagrees. The group of jurors favoring conviction may well come to view the "holdout" or "holdouts" not only as unreasonable, but as unwilling to follow the court's instructions on the law. The evidentiary standard that we endorse today--that "if the record evidence discloses any possibility that" a complaint about a juror's conduct "stems from the juror's view of the sufficiency of the government's evidence, the court must deny the request"--serves to protect these holdouts from fellow jurors who have come to the conclusion that the holdouts are acting lawlessly. n11
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n11 We do not intend to confine
the limitation set out in Brown to cases in which the record evidence raises
the possibility that the juror's request to be discharged, or the allegations
of his fellow jurors, stems from the juror's
doubts about the sufficiency of the prosecution's case. The courts must
in all cases guard against the removal of a juror--who aims to follow the
court's instructions--based on his view on the merits of a case. See United
States v.
Hernandez, 862 F.2d 17, 23 (2d Cir. 1988) ("That a juror may not be
removed because he or she disagrees with the other jurors as to the merits
of a case requires no citation."). Accordingly, if the record raises
any possibility that the juror's views on the merits of the case, rather
than a purposeful intent to disregard the court's instructions, underlay
the request that he be discharged, the juror must not be dismissed
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[*54]
This evidentiary standard
protects not only against the wrongful removal of jurors; it also serves
to protect against overly intrusive judicial inquiries into the substance
of the jury's deliberations. A presiding judge faced with anything but
unambiguous evidence that a juror refuses to apply the law as instructed
need go no further in his investigation of the alleged nullification; in
such circumstances, the juror is not subject to dismissal on the basis
of his alleged refusal to follow the court's instructions. A lower evidentiary
standard would encourage the court faced with ambiguous evidence of such
impropriety to investigate further, eliciting testimony from jurors until
enough evidence surfaced to affirm or reject allegations of juror nullification.
One unavoidable consequence of imposing a lower evidentiary
standard would thus be to open up the possibility that judges, in response
to demands of counsel or otherwise, would wind up taking sides in disputes
between jurors on allegations of juror nullification--in effect, to permit
judicial
interference with, if not usurpation of, the fact-finding role of the jury.
n12
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n12 As we note below, see infra p. 40, we do not decide whether, in this case, the court's inquiries of the jurors regarding Juror No. 5's behavior were themselves sufficiently intrusive to constitute reversible error. We decide this case, instead, on the question of the adequacy of the evidentiary basis for Juror No. 5's removal.
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[*55]
We recognize that this standard--buttressing the core principle of the secrecy of jury deliberations--leaves open the possibility that jurors will engage in irrational activity that will remain outside the court's powers to investigate or correct. It is an imperfect rule, no doubt, but one fully consistent with our history and traditions, in which the judge's duty and authority to prevent nullification and the need for jury secrecy co-exist uneasily. We recall, too, that "the jury system has worked out reasonably well overall, providing 'play in the joints' that imparts flexibility and avoids undue rigidity. . . . acting as a 'safety valve' for exceptional cases, without being a wildcat or runaway institution," Dougherty, 473 F.2d at 1134, and that our ultimate goal at trial is fairness and substantial justice--not perfection. See, e.g., Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 681, 89 L. Ed. 2d 674, 106 S. Ct. 1431 (1986) ("As we have stressed on more than one occasion, the Constitution entitled a criminal defendant to a fair trial, not a perfect one."). Where the duty and authority to prevent defiant disregard of the law or evidence comes into conflict with the principle of secret jury deliberations, we [*56] are compelled to select the lesser of two evils. Achieving a more perfect system for monitoring the conduct of jurors in the intense environment of a jury deliberation room entails an unacceptable breach of the secrecy that is essential to the work of juries in the American system of justice. To open the door to the deliberation room any more widely and provide opportunities for broad-ranging judicial inquisitions into the thought processes of jurors would, in our view, destroy the jury system itself.
A similar choice--to protect
deliberative secrecy at the risk of leaving some juror misconduct beyond
the court's power to remedy--underlies the long-standing common law rule
that "a juror may not impeach his own verdict,"
McDonald v. Pless, 238 U.S. 264, 267-68, 59 L. Ed. 1300, 35 S. Ct. 783
(1915), attributed originally to Lord Mansfield's decision in Vaise v.
Delaval, 99 Eng. Rep. 944 (K.B. 1785); see 8 JOHN H. WIGMORE, EVIDENCE
@ 2352 (J. McNaughton rev. ed. 1961), and now embodied, with qualifications,
in Rule 606(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence ("Rule 606(b)").
n13 The Supreme Court has expressly recognized the choice that is the basis
of the rule:
The rule is based upon controlling [*57] considerations of a public policy which in these cases chooses the lesser of two evils. When the affidavit of a juror, as to the misconduct of himself or the other members of the jury, is made the basis of a motion for a new trial, the court must choose between redressing the injury of the private litigant and inflicting the public injury which would result if jurors were permitted to testify as to what had happened in the jury room.
McDonald, 238 U.S. at 267.
Specifically, if post-verdict juror testimony could be used to impeach
a verdict, "the result would be to make what was intended to be a
private deliberation, the constant subject of public investigation--to
the destruction of all frankness and freedom of discussion and conference."
Id. at 267-68; see also Attridge v. Cencorp Div. of Dover Technologies
Int'l, Inc., 836 F.2d 113, 116 (2d Cir. 1987) (listing as one of the rule's
three purposes, "to promote free and uninhibited discourse during
deliberations"); S. REP. NO. 93-1277 (1974), reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N.
7051, 7060 ("Common fairness requires that absolute privacy be preserved
for jurors to engage in the full and free debate necessary to the [*58]
attainment of just verdicts. Jurors will not be able to function effectively
if their deliberations are to be scrutinized in post-trial litigation.").
The standard that we adopt here with respect to inquiries of deliberating
jurors likewise recognizes the basic necessity of protecting the secrecy
of the jury room, even when this
protection places some instances of willful disregard of the applicable
law beyond the reach of the court's corrective powers.
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n13 FED. R. EVID. 606(b) provides, in pertinent part:
Upon an inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment, a juror may not testify as to any matter or statement occurring during the course of the jury's deliberations or to the effect of anything upon that or any other juror's mind or emotions as influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from the verdict or indictment or concerning the juror's mental processes in connection therewith, except that a juror may testify on the question whether extraneous prejudicial information was improperly brought to the jury's attention or whether any outside influence was improperly brought to bear upon any juror.
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[*59]
* * *
We recognize that the standard
that we endorse today had not been articulated as part of the law of this
Circuit when the district court in the instant case ordered Juror No. 5's
dismissal. But in view of the risks, described above, inherent in the application
of a lower standard, we cannot uphold the dismissal. The only reports of
Juror No. 5's alleged lawlessness came from fellow jurors, and Juror No.
5 said nothing to the court to indicate that he was unwilling to follow
the court's instructions. On the contrary, he assured the court that his
vote was based on his view of the evidence: "I want substantive evidence
against them . . . and I want to know that it's clear in my mind beyond
a reasonable doubt." Nor was this statement without corroboration
from fellow jurors. Several of the jurors indicated in their interviews
with the court that Juror No. 5 justified his position during deliberations
in terms of the evidence--that he found the Government's evidence, including
its witness testimony, insufficient or unreliable. On this
record, we cannot say that it is beyond doubt that Juror No. 5's position
during deliberations was the result of his defiant unwillingness to apply
[*60] the law, as opposed to his reservations about the sufficiency of
the Government's case against the defendants.
In reaching the conclusion
that the district court erred in dismissing Juror No. 5, we note that Chief
Judge McAvoy proceeded with painstaking care and caution throughout this
trial, with a clear respect for the rights of the defendants to a fair
trial. It bears recalling that the judge on two separate earlier occasions
leaned over backward to retain Juror No. 5 on this jury--indeed, Juror
No. 5 was not removed at jury selection by a peremptory challenge of the
Government only because the judge, apparently hesitant to permit a challenge
to the single remaining black member of the venire, erred in the defendants'
favor in applying the teachings of Batson. n14 We are required to vacate
these judgments because the court dismissed Juror No. 5 largely on the
ground that the juror was acting in purposeful disregard of the court's
instructions on the law, when the record evidence raises a possibility
that the
juror was simply unpersuaded by the Government's case against the defendants.
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n14 See supra note 4, and accompanying text.
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[*61]
We need not reach the question of whether the court's inquiries were themselves sufficiently intrusive to constitute reversible error. Moreover, we do not decide here whether it would have been within the district court's discretion to dismiss Juror No. 5 for his distracting behavior, pursuant to Rule 24(c), n15 after the first round of in camera interviews but before the jury began its deliberations. Finally, we do not suggest, much less hold, that a juror's disruptive behavior--his reported "hollering," threatening to strike a fellow juror, or feigned vomiting--could not serve as grounds for dismissal, but we conclude that, in the circumstances presented here, the juror was removed largely for his allegedly nullifying behavior.
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n15 See supra note 5.
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D. Removal to Break Jury Deadlock
Several of the defendants
urge that there was a separate source of error in the district court's
decision to dismiss Juror No. 5. They argue, specifically, that the court
removed the juror as a means of achieving [*62] a unanimous verdict. See
Brief for Defendant-Appellant Grady Thomas at 17; Brief for Defendant-Appellant
Loray Thomas at 17-18, 21; Brief for Defendant-Appellant Ramse Thomas at
23-24; Brief for Defendant-Appellant Tracey Thomas at 9. Having
concluded that the district court erred by dismissing Juror No. 5 without
the requisite evidentiary basis, we need not decide whether the record
reveals an intention on the part of the court to remove Juror No. 5 as
a means of achieving jury unanimity. We address this issue briefly, however,
merely to note that, as the law of our Circuit makes clear, a district
court may under no circumstances remove a juror in an effort to break a
deadlock. See United
States v. Hernandez, 862 F.2d 17, 23 (2d Cir. 1988), cert. denied sub nom.
Quinones v. United States, 489 U.S. 1032, 103 L. Ed. 2d 228, 109 S. Ct.
1170 (1989) (finding error in decision to dismiss juror where, inter alia,
"the record . . . seemed to reflect that the cause of the removal
was as much to avoid a mistrial because of a hung jury as to excuse an
incompetent juror"); see also Wilson, 894 F.2d at 1250 (noting that
record lacked even "the slightest basis to believe that [the removed]
juror was a holdout [*63] juror or that the jury had reached any sort of
impasse in its deliberations"); Stratton, 779 F.2d at 832 (finding
that "the record [did] not present even the slightest basis to believe
that [the dismissed juror] was excused on a pretext to remove an obstacle
to reaching a unanimous verdict"). In fact, we subject a Rule 23(b)
dismissal to "meticulous" scrutiny in any case where the removed
juror was known to be the sole holdout for acquittal. Hernandez, 862 F.2d
at 23.
* * *
Finally, in order to clarify the nature of the new trial permitted by our decision, n16 we comment briefly on the defendants' remaining claims, including Ramse Thomas's arguments that he was prejudiced by being forced to wear leg irons during trial and that the court erred in failing to suppress certain telephone communications and Jason Thomas's claim that the Government presented the grand jury with perjured testimony. We have reviewed all of the defendants' claims and have found them to be without merit.
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n16 "The principle that [the Double Jeopardy Clause] does not preclude the Government's retrying a defendant whose conviction is set aside because of an error in the proceedings leading to conviction is a well-established part of our constitutional jurisprudence." United States v. Tateo, 377 U.S. 463, 465, 12 L. Ed. 2d 448, 84 S. Ct. 1587 (1964).
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[*64]
III.
For the reasons stated above, we conclude that:
(1) The district court properly determined that a juror's purposeful disregard of the law as set forth in the court's instruction may constitute "just cause" for that juror's removal under Rule 23(b).
(2) A court must not, however, remove a juror for an alleged refusal to follow the law as instructed unless the record leaves no doubt that the juror was in fact engaged in deliberate misconduct--that he was not simply unpersuaded by the Government's case against the defendants.
(3) The court in the instant case thus erred by dismissing Juror No. 5, and permitting the jury of eleven to continue its deliberations, based largely on Juror No. 5's alleged refusal to follow the court's instructions on the law, where the record evidence raises the possibility that the juror was attempting to follow the law as instructed, but that he simply remained unpersuaded of the defendants' guilt.
Accordingly, we vacate the judgments of the district court and remand for a new trial.
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