The defendant is here on an amended bill of exceptions after conviction under an indictment charging robbery. He was also tried and found not guilty under indictments charging him with the commission of an unnatural and lascivious act and assault and battery. We overrule the exceptions.
In this case, we are required once again to consider the scope and applicability of the United States Supreme Court’s holding in
Ham
v.
South Carolina,
The circumstances in the
Ham
case were novel. The defendant, a young black man, was well known as a civil rights activist in the small community where he had resided for most of his life. At the time of his trial, he had no prior record of convictions. His principal defense was that the local law enforcement authorities were “out to get him” because of his civil rights activities and had “framed” him on the charge of marihuana possession. With this factual background, the United States Supreme Court reversed his conviction. The court held that the trial judge in the voir dire improperly failed to examine potential jurors on the issue of racial bias. Mr. Justice Rehnquist, writing for the court, carefully limited the holding to the facts in the case: “The State having created this statutory framework for the selection of juries, the essential fairness required by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that
under the facts shown by this record
the petitioner be permitted to have the jurors interrogated on the issue of racial bias” (emphasis supplied).
Ham
v.
South Carolina,
Racial issues infected the entire Ham trial. The issues were inescapably and powerfully before the jurors. Bias formed the heart of the defense. The defendant rightfully contended that bias, official and covert, was the sole cause and foundation for the prosecution. The defendant fought bias in his civil rights activities, undoubtedly known to jurors drawn from the locality. Any latent bias harbored by the jurors would likely have been activated by the case and would have defeated the defendant’s efforts to achieve acquittal. When the racial issues were so salient and Ham, himself, was a special target for prejudice, the due process clause plainly entitled Ham to have the judge examine jurors for racial prejudice.
*216 Yet, in the light of the language of Mr. Justice Rehnquist quoted above, we do not believe that the due process clause mandates such examination in every case in which there is a black defendant. 1 We adhere to our prior holdings, cited above, that the defendant must be a special target for prejudice before the constitutional guaranties are invoked.
In the ordinary case, inquiries beyond the statutory questions, which raise generally the issue of bias, rest in the sound discretion of the trial judge.
Commonwealth
v.
Nassar,
This court’s interpretation of the
Ham
case was before the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
*218
recently in
Ross
v.
Ristaino,
“[Although we give respectful consideration to such lower Federal court decisions as seem persuasive,” we are, of course, “not concluded by decisions of . . . [lower] Federal courts.”
Commonwealth
v.
Masskow,
*219
It is appropriate at this point to note that the expansive construction of the
Ham
holding adopted by the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit would have a calamitous impact on the criminal justice systems of many States if the construction were accepted as good constitutional law and applied retroactively
5
to all prior trials. Reliance on former constitutional standards, which left the specific content of voir dire questions in State courts to the trial judge, for many years was widespread in this and other jurisdictions. See, e.g.,
Commonwealth
v.
Ross,
With this view of the law in mind, we turn now to the evidence in the instant case, before us on the defendant’s *221 amended bill of exceptions. The Commonwealth’s evidence tended to show the following. On February 19, 1972, the victim, a white woman, working as a cocktail waitress, canvassed the Prudential Center area of Boston in search of new employment. Unsuccessful in her search, she was walking along Boylston Street when she was accosted by the defendant. He asked her why she looked so depressed. On being told of her failure to find a new job, he offered to help and suggested that they repair to his apartment to discuss the matter. The victim at first refused, but then acquiesced.
There was further evidence that at the defendant’s apartment the two engaged in general conversation for some time. As the conversation progressed, the victim became increasingly uneasy. When she stood up to leave, the defendant began to caress her body. She protested, but was ultimately forced to disrobe and engage in unnatural acts with the defendant.
The victim remained in the defendant’s apartment overnight. At one point, she attempted to escape 8 and was apprehended by the defendant. He then barricaded the door with a chest. Later, the victim was again forced to engage in sexual acts with the defendant.
The following morning the victim was permitted to leave. However, before her departure the defendant searched her belongings and removed $47. This money was recovered by the police when they arrested the defendant shortly after the victim’s release.
At trial, the defendant was convicted of robbery, but was acquitted of assault and battery and commission of an unnatural and lascivious act. Notwithstanding his acquittal on the charges involving sex and violence, the defendant argues 9 forcefully that the sexual overtones of the case present a special circumstance which entitled *222 him to have questions concerning racial bias 10 put to the venire in the voir dire. We cannot agree that the refusal of the judge so to interrogate the prospective jurors required reversal in this case.
We cannot say that the facts of this case made the defendant more a special target for racial prejudice than any other black defendant who allegedly committed a crime of violence against a white victim. This case does not present the racial issues more vividly than a case involving a “brutal and unprovoked attack” on a white security guard who “received serious, multiple stab wounds”
(Commonwealth
v.
Ross,
There is no merit in the defendant’s further contention that the
Ham
case is applicable here on the ground that the key issue in the instant case was the victim’s credibility. It is true that in
Commonwealth
v.
Ross,
The denial of the defendant’s motion to put the special questions to the prospective jurors was not a denial of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Exceptions overruled.
Notes
We are aware that the holding in
Aldridge
v.
United States,
Our information indicates that, since the Ham decision, such motions are being granted routinely in the Superior Court.
The judge might suggest to the defendant that a desirable alternative to specific questions would be a forceful instruction to the jury which would caution jurors against bias in their deliberations.
The broader implications of the Ham case pose troubling problems for our system of criminal jurisprudence. Are black veniremen and women to be interrogated as to their possible racial prejudice against blacks or against whites? Assume a judge puts such questions to prospective jurors over a black defendant’s objection. Would that constitute reversible error (following conviction)? Would not the judge be asking the prospective juror if he would believe the defendant in spite of the fact that he is black? What of the situation where two codefendants are black, and one wants the interrogation and the other does not? Does this mean that severance is automatically required? This could cause much difficulty, especially where the cases should be tried together because the defendants had engaged in a joint criminal venture or in a criminal conspiracy.
The holding in the Ham case can, of course, also be carried to extremes. In a recent case in the Superior Court, a defendant of Polish antecedents requested that prospective jurors be interrogated as to possible racial bias. Commonwealth v. Lewinski, Suffolk Crim. Docket No. 76961 (1974). In a recent New York case a defendant of Italian ancestry made a similar motion. People v. Rubicco, 42 App. Div. 2d (N. Y.) 719 (1973), affd. 34 N. Y. 2d 841 (1974).
We have no doubt that the limited rule announced in the
Ham
case should be given retroactive effect. In the circumstances of that case, where the defendant was a special target for racial prejudice, failure to interrogate jurors concerning racial bias materially tainted the outcome of the trial. “Where [as in the
Ham
case] the major purpose of new constitutional doctrine is to overcome an aspect of the criminal trial that substantially impairs its truth-finding function and so raises serious questions about the accuracy of guilty verdicts in past trials, the new rule has been given complete retroactive effect.”
Williams
v.
United States,
We strongly question whether the enlargement of the holding in the
Ham
case proposed by the First Circuit, if accepted as good constitutional law, should be accorded retroactive effect. See
Ross
v.
Ristaino,
See
Commonwealth
v.
Ross,
New trials would follow in some cases.
The testimony regarding the “escape” conflicted in several material respects.
The other exceptions taken at trial have not been argued or
*222
briefed by the defendant’s counsel and are deemed waived.
Commonwealth
v.
Baldassini,
The requested questions relating to racial bias which the trial judge refused to put to the venire were:
“2. Will you be influenced in any way, either pro or con, by the race of Clifton Lumley?”
“3. Would you be able to give a black man accused of unnatural sexual acts with white women the same benefit of the doubt that you would give to a white defendant accused of unnatural sexual acts with black women?”
“9. Do you live in an integrated neighborhood?”
“10. If Negroes moved into your neighborhood, would you be more afraid of crime than you are now?”
"11. Would you be able to give a black man accused of unnatural sexual acts with a white woman the same benefit of doubt that you would give to a defendant accused of unnatural sexual acts with a woman of his own race?”
