Appellant Brian Grancorvitz petitioned the district court for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. He claimed his Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury and his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination were violated during his trial and conviction by the State of Wisconsin. The district court denied the petition. Grancorvitz appeals, raising the same two claims he presented to the district court. We affirm.
I.
Appellant was charged with first degree murder. Prior to trial, he moved for a change of venue or a jury outside of Vernon County, Wisconsin, which was denied by the trial court. The court did grant appellant’s motion in limine to prevent references to certain “other crimes” evidence. At trial, appellant admitted he stabbed the victim, but claimed self-defense. The jury convicted appellant of first degree murder, and the court sentenced him to life imprisonment. Appellant unsuccessfully moved for a new trial, partly on the ground that the trial court improperly denied his motion for a change of venue. Appellant then unsuccessfully appealed through the state courts, claiming a denial of his right to a fair and impartial jury; the court of appeals affirmed this conviction and the supreme court denied review. Appellant was also unsuccessful in his pursuit of state post-conviction relief, in which he alleged a violation of his privilege against self-incrimination from the prosecutor’s repeated references to his post-arrest silence.
Appellant then filed his habeas corpus petition in district court. He first argued, as he does on appeal, that he did not have an impartial jury because of the publicity regarding his arrest, the type of community in which he was tried, and the type of defense he presented. The district court held that “the trial court’s determination that the jury was impartial is fairly supported by the record.” It reasoned that the nature and timing of the pre-trial publicity did not suggest juror impartiality, that the voir dire sufficiently ruled out impartiality, and that the trial court was justified in giving little weight to the results of a survey submitted by appellant (and the accompanying expert witness testimony) which suggested community prejudice against him. Appellant also argued and continues to argue that the seven references by the prosecutor to appellant’s post-arrest failure to complain of injuries that would have occurred during his altercation with the victim and his attempts at self-defense, or to ask for medical treatment for those injuries, violated his right to remain silent invoked after receiving his Miranda warnings. The district court rejected this argument as well, holding that the prosecutor’s comments were intended to show appellant’s lack of physical injury, as relevant to appellant’s asserted claim of self-defense, rather than as an inference of guilt. The court held that at any rate any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
II.
TRIAL COURT’S DENIAL OF MOTION TO CHANGE VENUE
A.
The Sixth Amendment guarantees criminal defendants the right to “an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed.” Defen
*36
dants can establish the existence of a partial jury either by showing that pretrial publicity rendered the trial setting inherently prejudicial or by showing that the publicity created actual juror prejudice.
Willard v. Pearson,
A federal habeas court’s standard of review over a state court’s determination that a jury was impartial has not yet been definitively established. Both parties here ultimately argue under both a manifest error standard and a presumption of correctness standard requiring fair support for the finding in the record. In
Irvin,
the Supreme Court held that the issue of jury impartiality was a mixed question of law and fact, that a federal habeas court had an independent duty to evaluate the voir dire testimony, and that a determination of juror impartiality should only be set aside if the error was manifest.
*37 Under § 2254(d)’s presumption of correctness, a federal habeas court will reverse a state trial court determination only if it is not fairly supported by the record. Although a reviewing court’s independent review into whether another court’s decision was manifestly erroneous is also a deferential standard of review, we do not believe it involves the almost complete deference required under § 2254(d).
The Supreme Court itself has applied the two standards in a way that supports the argument that the standards involve differing levels of deference to state courts. The manifestly erroneous standard used by the Court in both
Irvin
and
Patton
regarding the issue of whole jury impartiality involved an independent examination and interpretation by the Court into the trial court record and voir dire testimony.
Irvin,
We believe that the slightly less deferential manifest error analysis should be applied in this ease.
4
Although the Supreme Court’s language in
Patton
clearly requires deference from reviewing courts on determinations of jury impartiality, the degree of deference required is not necessarily that of § 2254(d)’s presumption of correctness. Indeed, the Court itself in
Patton
analyzed the facts before it under the manifest error standard, and arguably that standard should apply until the Court states otherwise.
5
Moreover, the manifest error standard is sufficiently deferential to remain well within the realm of a federal habeas court reviewing state court determinations, and the burden remains on the petitioner to show manifest error.
United States v. Smith,
We believe manifest error is the appropriate test here because the determination of whole jury impartiality is less purely factual and less credibility based than the determination of individual juror impartiality, where the Court requires a presumption of correctness. Individual juror impartiality is determined on the basis of voir dire and the credibility of individual jurors. In determining whole jury impartiality, whether voir dire sufficiently dealt with preconceptions is one consideration, but there are larger inquiries into whether the type and timing of the publicity and the
*38
nature and posture of the community infringed on the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. These additional factors are ones which a state trial court is not necessarily in a better position to judge than a federal court on habeas review. Finally, as stated above,
Patton
itself utilized a different standard for individual juror impartiality than for whole jury impartiality, stating that
Irvin’s
analysis for whole jury impartiality could not be extended to an individual juror impartiality determination, because the latter decision is “plainly one of historical fact”, and “not one of mixed law and fact.”
Although we applied a presumption of correctness standard to the “inherently prejudicial” prong
6
of the whole juror impartiality issue in
Willard,
B.
Appellant claims that the combination of the pre-trial publicity, the nature of the community (a small rural community which he claims is biased against “outsiders”), and the nature of his defense (a self-defense claim heavily dependent on credibility determinations) deprived him of an impartial jury. He relies on various newspaper articles and radio reports, on a survey conducted by two University of Wisconsin faculty members about community attitudes toward appellant and the charges against him (based on 251 telephone interviews), 7 and on the testimony of four expert witnesses, testifying before trial and at appellant’s post-trial motion for a new trial, interpreting this survey, the pretrial publicity, and the likelihood of obtaining an impartial jury.
In its denial of appellant’s motion for a change of venue, the state trial court determined that voir dire would sufficiently protect appellant’s right to an impartial jury:
By attempting to find out during voir dire the extent of a potential juror’s knowledge of the case, including the drug charges, the Court will be able to exclude those persons where it appears they may have heard about those charges regardless of whether or not they could decide the ease impartially without reference to their previous knowledge. To this extent, the Court would allow individual Voir Dire of the potential jurors so that counsel may inquire specifically what they have heard about the case.
The court rejected the conclusion of the survey and appellant’s expert witnesses that “there was a reasonable probability of prejudice in the panel from which a jury would be drawn,” reasoning that the survey failed to inquire whether the 43% of the respondents who thought appellant was probably or definitely guilty could put aside what they had heard and decide the case on the facts given in court. The court emphasized that, contrary to appellant’s witnesses’ testimony, courts presume persons testify truthfully and that it is possible for them to “put aside outside factors and decide a case only on the evidence given in Court.” As for the survey’s suggestion of prejudice against persons with defendant’s characteristics and appearance, *39 the court found that no showing was made that such prejudices would not also exist elsewhere in the state, and the trial judge believed these biases could be brought out in voir dire. The trial court concluded that “a reasonable probability of prejudice does not exist in Vernon County.”
Under the manifest error standard, we must independently evaluate the testimony given to the state trial court to determine whether it was manifest error for that court to hold that the jury was sufficiently impartial to avoid a Sixth Amendment violation.
See Irvin,
In
Patton,
The Court also upheld the state court’s determination of jury impartiality in
Murphy,
In
Irvin,
We hold that the circumstances of appellant’s trial are more akin to those of the defendants in Patton and Murphy than to the defendant in Irvin. In this case, there were 180 persons in the initial juror pool. Seventy-nine of these individuals were questioned. Sixteen were excused for personal reasons. Sixty (95%) of the remaining sixty-three were familiar with the case, *40 and the court denied appellant’s motion to exclude all jurors who had heard about the case. The court and the lawyers then conducted individual sequestered voir dire. Nineteen persons were excused because they admitted strong pre-conceived notions about the case. Two individuals were excused because of their knowledge that appellant was allegedly involved with drugs. Appellant unsuccessfully moved to exclude two other prospective jurors who had prior knowledge of the case from reading a newspaper article that referred to excluded evidence. Of the thirteen persons selected for the panel, all but one person had prior knowledge of the case, five had exposure to publicity that referred to inadmissible evidence, and none could recall details of the publicity or of the case in general. The process of jury selection took one day.
While there are factors in this case which favor appellant’s argument that he was denied an impartial jury, the factors against appellant’s claim of an impartial jury outweigh those in his favor. First, the publicity at issue here was mostly factual. “[Ljargely factual” publicity does not present the same potential for prejudice as publicity which is “invidious or inflammatory.”
Murphy,
Finally, although appellant makes an interesting argument in claiming that receiving an impartial jury was particularly important because his case came down to whether the jury found his defense of self-defense credible or whether it instead believed the prosecution’s theory that the defense was fabricated, reliance on such an argument would allow reviewing courts to determine the appropriateness of a motion for a change of venue through hindsight. Trial courts do not know beforehand what issues will be determinative at trial. Moreover, an accused’s right to an impartial jury does not vary in degree by how crucial
*41
the jury’s credibility determinations were to the conviction. While such an analysis may be relevant to a harmless error inquiry, this type of inquiry is inapplicable here.
Coleman,
III.
PROSECUTOR’S COMMENTS ON POST-ARREST SILENCE
Appellant’s second claim is that the state prosecutor unconstitutionally commented upon his post-arrest silence. The Supreme Court has held that a prosecutor violates a defendant’s due process right by seeking to “impeach a defendant’s exculpatory story, told for the first time at trial, by cross-examining the defendant about his failure to have told the story after receiving
Miranda
warnings at the time of his arrest.”
Doyle v. Ohio,
There are seven references to appellant’s post-arrest silence at issue here. 9 Appellant points to the prosecutor’s one reference during the case-in-chief to appellant’s failure to discuss any injuries with the jailors following his arrest, 10 to the five references during cross-examination of appellant regarding his failure to seek medical help, 11 and to the one reference during closing argument to appellant’s failure to *42 complain of injuries. 12 Appellant claims that the prosecutor’s use of this silence was unconstitutional because it inferred that since appellant did not complain of serious injuries he probably was not injured during his fight with the victim, and therefore he could not have been acting in self-defense when he killed the victim. The state claims that appellant’s failure to complain about the injuries or to request medical assistance was not an invocation of his Miranda rights, since those rights guarantee a right not to respond to custodial interrogation, and not a generalized right to silence. Appellant counters that argument with reference to his affidavit which states that his silence was such an invocation because he was abiding by his counsel's advice that he not talk to anyone. Finally, the government claims that even if the references constituted a Doyle violation, such error was harmless.
The first prerequisite of
Doyle
was met here — appellant was given his
Miranda
warnings and thus there were government assurances that he could remain silent without penalty.
Cf. Fletcher v. Weir,
First, the type of silence at issue here is not the kind of silence assured protection under the
Miranda
warnings. Since the due process right established in
Doyle
is dependent upon the government giving assurances to an individual, such as those given under the
Miranda
warnings, the individual must be invoking the rights inherent in those assurances.
13
The
Doyle
holding stems from notions of “induced detrimental reliance” and “fundamental unfairness” because the warnings invite the arrestee to exercise the cited rights.
United States ex rel. Saulsbury v. Greer,
We do not believe that appellant’s failure to complain of injuries was an exercise of his
Miranda
right to remain silent. The type of silence addressed in
Doyle
was that defendant “did not speak about the facts of the case at that time, as he was told he need not do ...”
Doyle,
Some examples of silence which are protected by the
Miranda
warnings are a defendant’s failure to give the police his alibi,
Smith v. Rowe,
Although appellant’s affidavit from his state post-conviction motion states that his silence was the result of his attorney’s advice that he speak to no one about the case, that does not automatically transform silence into constitutionally protected silence. A conclusion to the contrary would imply that many instances of a defendant’s failure to do something involving verbal communication following receipt of his Miranda warnings could not be used by the prosecutor at trial, even though such failure was not a constitutionally protected act.
Second, the prosecutor’s use of appellant’s silence differs from the use of silence in cases where this court and the Supreme Court have found
Doyle
violations. The precedent in this area makes it clear that the government cannot use protected silence to impeach an exculpatory story or an explanation of the facts of the crime told at trial,
Greenfield,
We have noted before that since
Doyle
was based on flexible due process considerations, rather than those underlying the Fifth Amendment, “the rule prohibiting the government’s use of a defendant’s post-arrest silence depends upon a balancing of defense and prosecution interests and upon considerations of fairness within the context of the truth-seeking function of trials.”
United States v. Mavrick,
601 F.2d
*44
921, 933 (7th Cir.1979). We therefore must consider the degree of the state’s interest and the defendant’s involvement in creating that interest. In
Mavrick,
Although the defendant’s testimony would not permit the government to argue that his post-arrest silence was inconsistent with his claim of innocence, we hold it did permit the government to attempt to discredit his testimony by showing that he was given such an opportunity and did not take advantage of it. We find nothing fundamentally unfair to the defendant in permitting the government to correct an impression that the defendant created by his own testimony.
Id. at 933. As in Mavrick, the appellant here raised on direct examination the issue the prosecutor was attempting to counter during cross-examination: that he had been attacked with a bottle and the victim’s fists.
In
United States v. Shue,
Where a defendant claims self-defense at trial, it would be a violation of
Doyle
for the state to point out that the defendant, after receiving
Miranda
warnings, did not tell the police officers that he had acted in self-defense, and use that to infer that defendant had indeed not acted in self-defense. In
Allen,
In sum, we do not believe it is fundamentally unfair for a prosecutor to make reference to a defendant’s failure to complain of injuries following his arrest and Miranda warnings, even where such reference may indirectly undermine defendant’s theory of self-defense. The prosecutor’s references *45 here therefore did not amount to a Doyle due process violation. 17
IV.
The district court properly rejected appellant’s constitutional challenges to the state court’s denial of his motion for a change of venue and to the prosecutor’s use of his post-arrest silence. The district court’s denial of appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. Section 2254(d) states that a state court determination “on the merits of a factual issue ... evidenced by a written finding ... shall be presumed to be correct."
. The district court's language in this case suggests that it applied the § 2254(d) standard, as it held that "the trial court's determination that the jury was impartial is fairly supported by the record.”
.The opinions of other circuits reveal the confusion created by the
Patton
language.
See, e.g., Cummings v. Dugger,
. In applying the manifest error standard to questions of whole juror impartiality, we are in accord with opinions from four other circuit courts.
See United States v. Glaze,
. Even if the presumption of correctness standard were applicable here, the result in this case would be the same, since satisfying the less deferential manifestly erroneous standard necessarily satisfies the presumption of correctness standard as well.
Patton,
. Under the inherently prejudicial aspect of juror impartiality, a court may presume prejudice against the accused "where persuasive and inflammatory pretrial publicity utterly corrupts the trial atmosphere." Id.
. Seventy-five percent of the population surveyed was familiar with the crime, 43% believed appellant was "probably” or "definitely” guilty, 54% claimed no predisposition, and 3% believed appellant was innocent. As for broader predisposition, 68% of the respondents believed motorcycle gangs were prone to violence, and more than half stated they would doubt the credibility of a hippie or a long-haired member of a motorcycle group.
. The government correctly points out that the right alleged here does not stem from the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination but from the due process clause’s protection against fundamental unfairness.
See Wainwright v. Greenfield,
. Although appellant’s counsel did not object to these references at trial, the state post-conviction relief court allowed appellant to raise the issue and addressed it on its merits,
cf. United States ex rel. Memeigh v. Greer,
. The prosecutor asked a deputy sheriff on direct examination “Did you find any injuries on his person?" and "Did he complain of any injuries?”, to which the deputy sheriff replied in the negative.
.The primary references at issue were as follows:
Q. Did you show anybody those injuries?
A. I was in jail.
Q. I know; but did you ask to show them to the jailer?
A. No.
Q. Talk to the sheriff about them?
A. No.
Q. Okay; and in fact, they were so slight that you didn’t need any medical attention?
A. I didn’t think of any medical attention, no.
Q. Didn’t need any?
A. No.
Q. And didn’t request any?
A. No.
Q. So, those blows that you received in that area between the Tin Shack and the Anchor Inn were not of any great substance; were they?
A. No.
******
A. * * * I succeeded in receiving minimal blows to the face.
Q. So, you got some to the body — chest?
A. Yes.
Q. Call any of those injuries to the attention of anybody?
A. Nobody asked me.
Q. No, but did you call attention to them?
*42 A. No.
. The prosecutor’s relevant statement during closing argument was:
Now, if they had a fight — if they had a fight as the Defendant claims and he suffered many blows as he testified and a blow from a bottle and the fists — and he had many blows struck into the region of his head and his body — and yet he suffered no injury — brought in no evidence of any type of injury that he suffered at all. You would think after a serious struggle like that with two people pounding on you and being hit with a beer bottle, that you would have suffered some pretty serious inju-ríes. Never complained about any injuries after he had been brought back here to Vernon County, which was the next day — would be the next day. Really, the only self-defense in this whole case, and — the Defendant is going to talk about self-defense; but really the only self-defense in this entire case is on the part of Mr. Lind [the victim].
. The use of
pre-Miranda
warnings silence is therefore not a due process violation.
Fletcher v. Weir,
. Appellant claims he did not testify that he suffered serious injuries that would require medical attention, but he did make reference to being attacked with a bottle and by defendant’s fists. The prosecutor’s references were meant to undercut defendant’s statements about being attacked, and went to defendant’s general credibility regarding those statements, i.e., if the statements made now were true, defendant would have complained of the injuries and sought medical attention.
. This was the same type of impermissible use of silence found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in
Doyle.
. The questions asked by the prosecutor included "When the police showed up ... you never told them you were in fear of your life from your wife, did you?”, "In fact, you never told any law enforcement officer this did you?”, and "In fact, the first statements regarding this are from the stand in this trial aren’t they?’’. Further, in closing argument the prosecutor emphasized this silence again, and stated that "The defendant could not say self-defense because there was no self-defense.”
United States ex rel. Allen v. Franzen,
. Because we find no Doyle violation under the facts of this case, we need not address the issues of whether any such violation would be harmless error and what standard of review would govern such a determination.
