Lead Opinion
A Minnesota state court jury found Odell DePriest Crawford guilty of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, the rape of his girlfriend’s thirteen-year-old daughter. On direct appeal, Crawford argued that the trial court violated his constitutional right to a public trial by partially closing the courtroom while the victim testified without making the findings required by Minn.Stat. § 631.045 and by State v. Fageroos,
I.
The trial transcript reflects that after the jury was selected but before opening statements, the trial court stated to counsel:
Okay. The record [will] reflect we are outside of the presence of the jury. There were a couple of matters that counsel wished to put on the record ... before we begin the trial.
Counsel for Crawford responded first with a motion in limine, which the court granted. Defense counsel then stated, “It’s also my understanding that Mr. Nolen [the prosecutor] is going to ask for ... the courtroom to be closed during [the victim’s] testimony.” After resolving a witness scheduling issue, the court returned to this issue, saying, “Mr. Nolen, you had a request also.” The prosecutor replied:
Yes, Your Honor. I did indicate that the child who is going to testify wants to have her mother present. I talked to them, and the state will call the mother first with the understanding that she would then be able to remain in the courtroom while the child testifies. The child also has an aunt present who wishes to be present while she testifies. There is also an advocate ... from my office who would be present. Other than that, I would ask the courtroom be closed while she testifies.
In response, defense counsel first acknowledged “that the statute allows, if the Court determines that it’s necessary, for someone to be there to support a child alleged victim.” Counsel then objected to allowing the victim’s mother to be present, as well as her aunt and an advocate, on the ground that the mother might give nonverbal testimony not subject to cross exami
Defense counsel then asked that his investigator “be allowed to be in the courtroom during the testimony.” The court granted this request at the conclusion of counsels’ opening statements. After the victim’s mother testified as the first trial witness, the prosecution called the victim to testify. The record does not reflect that the courtroom was cleared or that anyone was asked to leave before this testimony, whether any member of the public was denied entry to the proceedings, or whether the courtroom was reopened following the victim’s testimony. We assume, as the parties, the district court, and the Minnesota Court of Appeals have assumed, that the courtroom was closed in accordance with the trial judge’s ruling.
II.
Anglo-American jurisprudence has for centuries recognized that openness “enhances both the basic fairness of the criminal trial and the appearance of fairness so essential to public confidence in the system.” Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court,
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court,
In Waller v. Georgia,
the party seeking to close the hearing must advance an overriding interest that is likely to be prejudiced, the closure must be no broader than necessary to protect that interest, the trial court must consider reasonable alternatives to closing the proceeding, and it must make findings adequate to support the closure.
Id. at 48,
As Crawford acknowledges, federal habeas relief may not be granted on a federal claim that the state appellate court declined to address because the petitioner failed to meet a state procedural requirement constituting an “independent and adequate state ground.” Coleman v. Thompson,
In State v. Fageroos, the Supreme Court of Minnesota applied Waller to the appeal of a sexual offense conviction. The trial court had summarily closed the courtroom to “four observers” while the minor victim and her sister testified. The record did not reflect compliance with the requirements of § 631.045 and Waller or whether the defendant had consented or objected to the closure.
A few months after the decision in Fage-roos, the Minnesota Court of Appeals held in an unreported decision that “the failure of a defendant to object to a closure order does not waive the issue” for purposes of plain error postconviction review. As in Fageroos, the Court remanded for findings as to the need for closure. State v. Anderson, No. C2-95-1087,
Anderson and Danforth seem inconsistent with the cryptic discussion of waiver by the Minnesota Court of Appeals in Crawford. However, in State v. Bashire,
These many decisions reflect a basic consistency in the way the Minnesota appellate courts apply the general doctrine of waiver to determine when a claim that the trial court failed to comply with the public trial mandates of § 631.045, Fageroos, and Waller has been procedurally defaulted. A defendant’s passive failure to object to closing the courtroom while the victim of a sex offense testifies does not waive compliance with the requirements of a detailed inquiry into the need for closure and of appropriate findings. But if the defendant acting through his attorney agrees to closure (and assuming no member of the public lodges a First Amendment objection), the issue is procedurally defaulted on appeal. The distinction is logical — often both the prosecution and the defense may agree that closure of the courtroom while a young victim testifies is, in the words of § 631.045, “necessary to protect a witness or ensure fairness in the trial.” Moreover, the Minnesota courts understandably draw the procedural default line against a defendant who agrees to closure in the trial court and then claims on appeal that closure taints an adverse verdict.
In this case, we conclude that Crawford did not merely fail to object, he agreed to a partial closure of the courtroom while the victim testified. Defense counsel advised on the record that the prosecutor would ask to close the courtroom. This strongly suggests that counsel and no doubt the court had previously discussed the issue off the record. When the prose
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The HONORABLE JOHN R. TUNHEIM, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota, adopting the Report and Recommendation of the HONORABLE JONATHAN LEBEDOFF, United States Magistrate Judge for the District of Minnesota.
. In his pro se objections to the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation, Crawford asserted, "The victims grandmother was in the courtroom too.” The record neither confirms nor refutes that assertion.
. For further confirmation that the constitutional right to a public trial may be waived, see Levine v. United States,
. In other unreported decisions where the Minnesota Court of Appeals remanded for findings or evidentiary hearings without addressing the waiver issue, the State either defaulted the issue on appeal, see State v. Biebinger, No. C6-97-2067,
. Similarly, in an earlier case, State v. Weigold, 281 Minn. 73, 160 N.W.2d 577, 580 (1968), after defense counsel's objection to closure of the courtroom during the testimony of one witness was sustained, the prosecutor requested closure during testimony of another witness. Defense counsel stated, "I have no objection to this.” On appeal, the Supreme Court enforced the waiver, rejecting defendant’s argument that his personal consent was required to allow clearing the courtroom.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
A district court is precluded from addressing a constitutional claim in a habeas petition if a state court has already rejected the claim based on an independent and adequate state ground. White v. Bowersox,
When the Minnesota Court of Appeals heard Crawford’s appeal there was just one published
Crawford argues the waiver rule in the courtroom closure context was neither firmly established nor regularly followed in Minnesota when it was applied to his case. I agree. There are at least two ways we could look at the above-cited series of cases. Neither provides for the application of the independent and adequate state ground doctrine to preclude federal review of this claim. By my reading, the Minnesota Court of Appeals, in the instant case, was applying a new incarnation of the waiver rule. This version, unlike the rule in Bashire, did not require the defendant to explicitly agree to closure for there to be a waiver.
There is another way to view the case law. The Court suggests the Minnesota Court of Appeals was applying the waiver rule from Bashire in the instant case. Ante at 855. As noted above, however, there is no indication anywhere in the decision as to the Minnesota Court of Appeals finding Crawford having waived his right to challenge the closure because he affirmatively agreed to the closure. Even if the Crawford court was applying the rule from Bashire, however, this would constitute only the second application of the waiver rule in this context after Waller.
The Court suggests there is “a basic consistency in the way the Minnesota appellate courts apply the general doctrine of waiver.” Ante at 855. Our charge, however, is not to determine whether there is a “basic consistency” in the Minnesota appellate courts’ general application of the waiver rule. It is to determine whether an independent and adequate state procedural rule — in this case the application of the waiver rule in the context of a courtroom closure — was firmly established and regularly applied at the time it was applied to Crawford. White,
. It should be noted unpublished appellate decisions in Minnesota are not precedential. See Minn.Stat. § 480A.08.
. Since Crawford, the Minnesota’ Court of Appeals has continued to apply the waiver rule as it was articulated in Bashire. See State v. Delacruz, No. A03-129,
. The Court concludes, based on the extremely limited record, that Crawford affirmatively agreed to the closure here thus meeting the standard for a waiver under Bashire. Ante at 855-56. Although the Court recognizes there is no explicit agreement in the record, it concludes defense counsel must have agreed to the closure off the record because the record contains a discussion regarding who should be present during the minor victim's testimony. I am unwilling to preclude federal review of Crawford's constitutional claim based entirely on conjecture. Nevertheless, this court is not charged with undoing the Crawford court's misapplication of Bashire. We must simply determine whether the waiver rule, as applied in Crawford's case, was firmly established and regularly followed.
. The Minnesota Supreme Court has not recently spoken to the waiver issue in this context. In State v. Fageroos,
