William Anthony Brooks was convicted in 1977 of the murder, armed robbery, rape and kidnapping of a young woman. He was sentenced to death. His murder conviction was vacated in
Brooks v. Kemp,
762 F2d 1383 (11th Cir. 1985),
vacated and remanded,
1. Brooks contends that double jeopardy bars the state from seeking the death penalty in the retrial. Double jeopardy applies to the sentencing phase of a capital trial if there was insufficient evidence at the original trial to support the aggravating circumstances, or if the jury recommended life imprisonment at the first trial.
Spraggins v. State,
2. In this division we address the question whether an indigent criminal defendant’s application for funds for expert assistance shall be heard outside the presence of the counsel for the state. The state appeals from the trial court’s order granting defendant’s motion to make ex parte applications for funds. The trial court found that if an indigent defendant in justifying his need for expert assistance is compelled to reveal his theory of the case in the presence of the district attorney, he might be denied due process and equal protection vis-ávis the non-indigent defendant who does not need to apply for public funds for assistance, and he might suffer an abridgement of his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination, his right to counsel, and his right to present a defense. Noting that the hearing on a motion for funds is non-adversarial in nature, the court found that the state has no interest in being present. The state argues that as the representative of the people of Georgia, it has a fundamental interest in being present at any hearing on an application for funds by defendant.
The state points to
Anderson v. State,
The state argues that these authorities mandate the presence of the district attorney at a hearing where a criminal defendant makes a threshold showing of entitlement to public funds for the hiring of experts. We do not agree. These cases hold that on review the trial court’s refusal to exclude a district attorney was not reversible error.
The United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Ake v. Oklahoma,
Defendant argues that since in making the application for funds it is critical that the defendant make a detailed showing of evidence involved,
Thornton v. State,
We have found no clear authority, and the parties have shown us none, mandating that hearings on motions for public funds be held ex parte. The Ake holding does not clearly mandate that the hearing be ex parte. Other federal cases upon which defendant relies construe federal statutes providing for ex parte hearings and are not binding upon us.
While we have noted that we are bound by neither federal statutes dealing with the indigent defendant’s obtaining expert assistance nor the cases construing them, these cases do contain helpful analysis. In United States v. Meriwether, supra, the court discussed the 1966 amendment to F. R. Crim. P., Rule 17 (b), which provides that application for subpoenas by defendants unable to pay for them be made to the court ex parte. The court disagreed with the prosecutor’s contention that ex parte means without the participation of the other and held that ex parte means outside the presence of the other. Further, the court found that the reason that the hearing must be ex *565 parte is not to protect the defendant from the opposition of the prosecutor but to protect the defendant from revealing his theory of the case to the prosecutor. Finally, the court found that to place the indigent defendant in the position of revealing his theory of the case in the presence of the prosecutor in the context of a motion for funds to subpoena witnesses when a non-indigent defendant could avoid similar scrutiny would raise serious equal protection questions. The court noted, moreover, that the amendment to F. R. Crim. P., Rule 17 (b), was intended by Congress to address the equal protection ramifications of the problem.
In Ake, supra, the Court reiterated the fundamental principle
. . . that when a State brings its judicial power to bear on an indigent defendant in a criminal proceeding, it must take steps to assure that the defendant has a fair opportunity to present his defense. This elementary principle, grounded in significant part on the Fourteenth Amendment’s due process guarantee of fundamental fairness, derives from the belief that justice cannot be equal where, simply as a result of his poverty, a defendant is denied the opportunity to participate meaningfully in a judicial proceeding in which his liberty is at stake. [Id. at 76.]
Identification of the right which is at stake here is more complicated than acknowledging the right of the indigent defendant to obtain the expert assistance necessary to assist in preparing his defense. While exercising that right, the defendant also has the right to obtain that assistance without losing the opportunity to prepare the defense in secret. Otherwise, the defendant’s “fair opportunity to present his defense,” acknowledged in Ake, will be impaired.
In
Roseboro v. State,
A motion on behalf of an indigent criminal defendant for funds with which to obtain the services of a scientific expert should disclose to the trial court, with a reasonable degree of precision, why certain evidence is critical, what type of scientific testimony is needed, what that expert proposes to do regarding the evidence, and the anticipated costs for services. Lacking this information, a trial court will find it difficult to assess the need for assistance.
The task before us is to create a procedure for the showing described in
Roseboro
which will protect the legitimate interests of the state and the defendant. In devising a procedure for the application
*566
for funds we must take into account the interest of the state, the interest of the defendant, and the burden and benefit of the procedural safeguards chosen.
Mathews v. Eldridge,
*566 We affirm the trial court’s order that an application for funds be presented to the court in chambers. The matter will be heard ex parte. The state may submit a brief, which will be considered at the time of the ex parte hearing. The ex parte proceeding shall be reported and transcribed as part of the record but shall be sealed in the same manner as are those items examined in camera. The court in its discretion may reserve issues to be heard at a separate hearing at which the state will be present. The state may always be represented when the defendant is examined as to his indigency.
Going beyond the argument that the hearing need not be
ex parte,
the state contends that defendant is not entitled to public funds. This argument is based on a discussion of the limits of
Ake
and on
Sabel v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The jury recommended the death penalty stating, “We the jury find the following aggravating circumstances: armed robbery, and rape. . .[and] the offense of murder was outrageously and wantonly vile, horrible and inhuman, in that it involved depravity of mind to the victim.”
