The trial of the defendant, Glen S. Alebord, took place from February 3 to February 5, 2004. He was convicted by a jury of murder in the second degree; we consolidated his direct appeal and the appeal from the denial of his motion for a new trial, and his conviction was affirmed. See Commonwealth v. Alebord,
Proceedings below. The motion judge, who was also the trial judge, held an evidentiary hearing and found that the defendant’s trial was held in the second criminal session of the Brock-ton courthouse of the Plymouth County Division of the Superior Court Department, a courtroom that accommodated sixty people seated on the benches along the back and one side of the courtroom or about eighty people standing wall-to-wall. The judge found that the third and fourth criminal sessions courtrooms are bigger than the second session, that each can seat about eighty people, and that those courtrooms were unused on the morning of jury impanelment, February 3, 2004. Seventy-two jurors were summoned for jury service on that day, and the entire venire was brought up to the second session courtroom for jury impanelment, which lasted about eighty minutes.
The judge found that the defendant’s friend, his sister, and his brother-in-law were prevented from entering the courtroom by a court officer stationed by the only public entrance to the courtroom. The judge found that the court did not order the exclusion but that pursuant to what she described as “the court officers’ safety policy, . . . members of the public other than venirepersons were not permitted to enter the courtroom if there was only standing room inside.” The judge found that with seventy-two venire persons inside the second session courtroom there were no seats available for the defendant’s friend and relatives, and found that there was nothing in the record showing that seats became available in that courtroom during the jury impanelment process. She found that the defendant’s attorney had no knowledge of anyone being excluded from the courtroom “at any time.”
The judge concluded that the courtroom was not closed for constitutional purposes because she did not exclude members of the public for an indiscriminate reason or time period, but rather that three members of the public unknown to the court officers
The judge also concluded that even if a closure had taken place, the defendant had waived his objection by failing to object at trial to the closure. She also found that, in any event, the defendant had not made a showing that there was sufficient space in the courtroom to permit his friend and relatives to be seated safely inside the courtroom or that the larger courtroom would have afforded a solution to the problem by allowing those individuals to sit apart from the venire.
Discussion. During the pendency of this appeal, the Supreme Judicial Court decided Commonwealth v. Cohen (No. 1),
In 1984, the Supreme Court held that the voir dire of prospective jurors must be open to the public under the First Amendment. See id. at 510. That same year in Waller v. Georgia,
In the evidentiary hearing on this new trial motion, the defendant’s trial counsel, who is an experienced trial attorney, testified
In Owens v. United States,
There can be no doubt that, unless the court officer’s action was within some independent exception, the courtroom in this case was “closed” in the constitutional sense. The fact that a court officer, not the judge, prevented the defendant’s friend and relatives from entering the courtroom during jury selection does not alter this. As the Supreme Judicial Court made clear in Cohen,
Before a courtroom may be closed, “a judge must make a case-specific determination that closure is necessary.” Id. at 107. In order for a courtroom closure to be held permissible, it
Where space does not permit members of the public to attend a portion of voir dire, it might amount to a sufficient interest to justify a closure of the courtroom. See id. at 112 (concluding that “lack of space to accommodate the general public due to the number of prospective jurors in the court room” is a “substantial” interest that might justify partial closure of a courtroom). Nonetheless, the “closure may be ‘no broader than necessary to protect [the] interest’ ” that requires the closure. Id. at 113, quoting from Waller,
The Commonwealth argues that we should affirm because the rule that the Sixth Amendment right to a public trial includes jury impanelment that was articulated in Presley and applied in Cohen should not be applied in this case where Owens, Presley, and Cohen were all decided after the judgment in this case became final.
The Supreme Judicial Court has announced that it will follow the retroactivity rule articulated in Teague v. Lane,
To be sure, here, the judge did not at trial have the benefit of Presley or Owens. In Presley, however, the Supreme Court held that the exclusion of the public from jury selection violated the Court’s “clear [Sixth Amendment] precedents.”
The Commonwealth also argues that the closure, to which, again, there was no objection at trial, created no substantial risk
Nonetheless, “ [although denial of the right to public trial is a structural error, ‘we do look to whether the defendant raised [the] issue in a timely manner because “the right to a public trial, like other structural rights, can be waived.” ’ [Cohen, 456 Mass.] at 105-106 (internal citations omitted).” Downey,
The judge in this case determined that the defendant did not object to the closure of the courtroom, and concluded on that basis that his claim was waived. Silence alone, however, is not
Further, as the defendant notes, in Cohen,
The judge acknowledged that “[t]he right to be tried in open court is not trammeled by a short, inadvertent, trivial courtroom closure,” but did not rule whether the de minimis exception applied in this case. Particularly since the scope of this de minimis exception has not yet been addressed in any decision of a court of the Commonwealth, and in light of the fact that a remand is in any event required, we think it prudent to allow the motion judge to consider, after full briefing, both its scope and whether the facts of this case might fall within this exception. We emphasize that we express no opinion on either question; there has been some debate after Presley about the first. See, e.g., Owens v. United States,
The order denying the motion for new trial is therefore vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
The facts are not precisely the same. In Owens, the First Circuit stated that “[d]espite the growing number of seats vacated by dismissed jurors, ... the marshals continued to bar Owens’ family from the courtroom for the remainder of jury selection, which lasted an entire day.” Id. at 54. As described above, the judge in this case found that “there is nothing in the record to suggest that seats ever became available” during the eighty-minute impanelment.
Contrary to the conclusion of the judge, venirepersons are not members of the public in the relevant sense, so the presence of venirepersons in the courtroom does not mean it has not been closed for constitutional purposes. See Presley,
That court has recently expressly reserved the question whether a broader retroactivity rule might apply as a matter of State law. See Commonwealth v. Clarke,
In Owens,
The judge’s findings on remand could also obviate the need to address the defendant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claim. Consequently, we do not address it further here.
