In 1977 a jury in an Indiana state court convicted Douglas Thompkins of first-degree murder. The judge sentenced him to life in prison. The supreme court of the state affirmed the conviction and sentence.
Thompkins v. State,
Three masked men robbed a restaurant. During the course of the robbery one of them killed a customer. Another cut his *332 hand in the escape. One turned state’s evidence and testified that Thompkins had been one of the band. This testimony was corroborated by a friend of Thompkins’, who testified that he had seen Thompkins after the robbery with his hand bandaged and carrying a gun, and by evidence that the blood found in the getaway car was of the same blood type as Thompkins', while the blood of the other robbers, and also of the murdered customer, was of a different type. Thompkins introduced alibi evidence.
He claims that he did not get a fair trial, and this for three principal reasons (the others have no possible merit, so they need not be discussed). The first is that his lawyer had a conflict of interest. He was under investigation for bribing police officers to reduce charges against his clients. The prosecutor’s office — the same office that prosecuted Thompkins — had given the lawyer immunity in exchange for cooperation and had promised, if the lawyer fulfilled his part of the bargain, to help him retain his license to practice law. A situation of this sort (the criminal defendant’s lawyer himself under criminal investigation), which unfortunately is all too common, see, e.g.,
United States v. Balzano,
When the lawyer was asked at Thompkins’ state post-conviction hearing whether he had told Thompkins about his own legal troubles, the lawyer testified: “I don’t recall whether I talked to him or not. It was on the front page of every other paper, morning and evening, and on the six o’clock news, so I imagine everybody in town was aware of it. Perhaps he wasn’t.” (Emphasis added.) Thompkins’ current counsel pounces on the statement we have italicized and argues that everybody includes the judge. That is conjecture. Not everybody watches the six o’clock news every night. Indianapolis is not a little village in which everybody has his nose deep in everybody else’s affairs. It is true that in response to a specific question whether the judge at Thompkins’ trial had known about the lawyer’s legal troubles, the lawyer said, “Yeah, he knew it.” But the issue was not pursued, leaving it unclear whether the lawyer was doing more than deducing that since “everybody in town was aware of it” the judge, as somebody in town, must have been aware of it. The conclusion of a syllogism is no stronger than its premises.
Neither the state courts nor the federal district court have ever made a finding on the question whether the trial judge knew about the lawyer’s troubles. However, Thompkins does not complain about the absence of a finding or ask for a remand to *333 the district court for further findings or evidence. He asks us to find on this record that the judge knew. We cannot do that; the record is too skimpy. Thompkins has failed to prove that the judge knew of the circumstances alleged to create a conflict of interest.
The second issue concerns the prosecutor’s failure to give Thompkins the names of the three rebuttal witnesses before they testified. At first glance this seems a hopeless endeavor to establish a constitutional right to pretrial discovery in criminal cases. There is in general no such right,
Weatherford v. Bursey,
We come to the third issue. At the time of trial Thompkins had no criminal record. But the prosecutor repeatedly insinuated that he had committed other crimes. On cross-examination she asked Thompkins’ mother (one of his alibi witnesses, remember) whether she knew that her son had been arrested for carrying a concealed weapon. Later she asked Thompkins whether the $200 that he had at his mother’s house “was from other robberies”? And in closing argument she told the jury that all three of the defendants had “committed many other crimes.” The Indiana Supreme Court, while remarking that “the prosecutor’s conduct was improper” and that “such comments come perilously close to conduct for which a conviction will be reversed,” held the error harmless because the first two times the judge had told the jury to pay no attention to the question and the third time he told the prosecutor in the jury’s presence to refrain from improper comment.
Whether the error was harmless is not the issue here. There is no federal constitutional right not to be questioned about prior crimes, whether or not one has been convicted of them or for that matter has committed them.
Brecht v. Abrahamson,
Given the strong evidence of Thompkins’ guilt, we cannot say that he has carried his burden of proving that the improper evidence of other crimes may well have caused the conviction of an innocent person.
Affirmed.
