Lead Opinion
California state prisoner Stevie Lamar Fields appeals the district court’s summary judgment on his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 habeas petition with respect to his 1979 convictions for the robbery and murder of Rosemary Cobbs; the robbery of Clarence Gessendaner; the kidnaping for robbery, robbery, rape, forced oral copulation, and assault with a deadly weapon on Gwendolyn Barnett; the kidnaping for robbery and forced oral copulation of Cynthia Smith; and the kidnaping, robbery, rape, and forced oral copulation of Colleen Coates. However, the district court granted Fields’s cross-motion for summary judgment on the penalty phase, ordering that the sentence of death be vacated and set aside unless Fields is given a new trial because of the jury’s consideration of extraneous evidence. The state cross-appeals this ruling.
We agree with the district court on all of the claims having to do with Fields’s conviction except for his claim of juror bias. As to it, we conclude that an evidentiary hearing is needed. Given this disposition, we do not reach any of the penalty phase issues.
I
Fields was paroled on September 13, 1978, after serving a sentence for the voluntary manslaughter of Albert A., whom he had bludgeoned to death with a barbell.
The following day, Rosemary and Fields again entered Fields’s bedroom together. Fields came out of the bedroom and asked Debbie, his brother’s former girlfriend and a frequent visitor at the Fields residence, if she wanted to see how he punished his girlfriends. Debbie declined, but Fields pushed her to the bedroom door, where she saw Rosemary naked and tied to Fields’s bed. Fields reentered the bedroom "with a gun, ordered Rosemary to give him more money, and told her that he was going to take her on a long trip “and she wasn’t never going to come back.”
That afternoon, Debbie saw Fields, Gail, and Rosemary (fully dressed and carrying her purse) leave the Fields residence. Fields and Rosemary got into the back seat of a borrowed car, and Gail drove the vehicle toward the freeway. As Gail approached the on-ramp to the freeway, she heard a gunshot and Rosemary’s cry of “Oh, God.” Fields shot Rosemary four more times. He told Gail that he had to make sure Rosemary was dead. Fields then struck Rosemary in the head with a blunt object.
Gail drove to an alley near the Fields residence. Fields removed Rosemary’s body and left it in the alley. Debbie saw Fields and Gail return to the Fields residence without Rosemary. Debbie walked to the alley and saw the body. She walked back to the Fields residence and asked Fields about Rosemary, to which he replied, “[s]he was going on a long trip and was never coming back.”
A family friend who loaned Fields the car testified that it was returned to him with two bullet holes. A bank official verified the $222 check from Rosemary to Gail. The police officers who later searched the Fields residence uncovered Rosemary’s purse, driver’s license, and a torn check from Rosemary to Gail for $185.
On the evening of October 2, 1978, Clarence Gessendaner parked his Trans Am Pontiac outside of a drug store. When Gessendaner returned to his car, Fields, armed with a gun, approached him with another man and demanded his car keys. Gessendaner handed Fields his car keys and started to leave, but Fields called him back and asked for money. Gessendaner gave him what he had, about $4 or $5. The victims of Fields’s subsequent crimes all observed Fields driving Gessendaner’s Trans Am.
Gwendolyn Barnett and Cynthia Smith, both prostitutes, saw Fields and William Blackwell, a 17-year-old friend of Fields, drive by in Gessendaner’s Trans Am early in the morning on October 5, 1978. Fields and Blackwell, who had a gun, walked up to the women and ordered them into the car. Fields asked them if they had any money.
Fields then drove to an alley near the Fields residence. He took the gun from Blackwell and directed Gwendolyn and Cynthia to enter the house and go to the
Later Fields, Blackwell and the two women assembled in the same room and smoked marijuana. Fields told Gwendolyn to have oral sex with Cynthia. After she complied, he ordered her to perform anal sex. When Gwendolyn refused, Fields struck her with the gun, breaking Gwendolyn’s jaw and the handle of the gun. Fields then raped Gwendolyn, while Blackwell raped Cynthia.
Gwendolyn passed out on a mattress in the bedroom. When she awoke, she saw Blackwell holding a knife, and heard Fields tell Blackwell, “Man, go and cut the bitch up. You can’t just leave her laying there.” Fields told Cynthia to clean up the blood from Gwendolyn’s injury.
Fields and Blackwell ordered the women to dress and accompany them in the Trans Am to pick up more prostitutes to rob. They found two women whom Fields again compelled at gunpoint to enter the car. After they returned to the Fields residence, Fields allowed Gwendolyn and Cynthia to leave.
Cynthia took Gwendolyn to a hospital for treatment of her jaw. A subsequent police search of the Fields residence turned up Gwendolyn’s wig and blouse and Cynthia’s identification card. The police also observed extensive blood stains on the mattress where Gwendolyn had lain.
A few hours after releasing Gwendolyn and Cynthia, Fields and Blackwell approached Colleen Coates, an 18-year-old student at the University of Southern California, in a restaurant parking lot. Fields and Blackwell ordered her at gunpoint into the Trans Am, which was in a nearby alley. Blackwell drove Fields and Colleen to the Fields house.
Fields ordered Colleen into his bedroom. Blackwell asked for the keys to Colleen’s car, and Fields demanded that she give them to him. When Blackwell left with the keys, Fields looked through Colleen’s purse, took about $12, and asked if she had a checking account.
Fields instructed Colleen to remove her clothes, and struck her for not removing them fast enough. He ordered her to perform oral sex on him and to submit to intercourse.
Fields then demanded more money from Colleen. Colleen told him that she could withdraw $2,000 from a Crocker Bank savings account through a computerized night teller. She tore a page from the phone book giving the address for the local Crocker Bank branch, and she, Fields, and Blackwell drove to the branch. Fields decided that there were too many people around, and so returned to the Fields residence without withdrawing the money.
After ordering Colleen to smoke marijuana and demanding that one of her girlfriends bring him more money, Fields told her that he would have to kill her because she had too many counts on him. Colleen begged him not to kill her. She tried to escape by throwing herself backwards through a closed window in the bedroom. Colleen broke the window and cut her back, but Fields grabbed her and pulled her back into the house. Fields then told Colleen that he would not kill her unless she tried to escape.
The following morning, Fields told Colleen that he would let her go if she would buy marijuana for him. She drove him to a location about four blocks away and purchased the drugs for him. Fields then
When the police arrived at the Fields residence, Fields had already left. He and Blackwell appeared later at Debbie’s house, where they stayed for two days. Fields was arrested October 9, 1978, at a Greyhound bus station. He was charged with robbery of a car from Gessendaner, kidnaping, robbery, forced oral copulation, and rape of Coates; kidnaping for robbery and forced oral copulation of Smith; kid-naping for robbery, robbery, rape, forcible oral copulation, and assault with a deadly weapon of Barnett; and with the murder of Rosemary Cobbs. Special circumstances were alleged, that the murder was willful, deliberate, and premeditated and committed during the commission of a robbery.
Carl Jones was appointed to represent Fields on March 16, 1979. Fields changed his plea from “not guilty” to “not guilty by reason of insanity,” but the jury found that he was not insane. The guilt phase began on June 18, 1979. The jury found Fields guilty on all counts and found the special circumstance to be true.
The penalty phase took place July 16, 1979. The jury returned a death verdict, and Fields was subsequently sentenced to death.
The California Supreme Court affirmed the judgment. People v. Fields,
Fields filed a second amended habeas petition in the district court on March 21, 1995. The district court granted the State’s motion to dismiss Fields’s second federal habeas petition on June 10, 1996 on procedural grounds. This court permitted Fields to take an interlocutory appeal of the district court’s dismissal order on August 27, 1996. We held that the Dixon rule was not an adequate and independent state ground to bar federal review of Fields’s defaulted claims, and remanded the case to the district court for examination of those claims on the merits. Fields v. Calderon,
Fields filed an application for a Certificate of Appealability (COA) on February 16, 2000 on all claims that he currently raises on appeal. The district court granted a Certificate of Probable Cause. Because Fields filed his habeas petition before the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), AEDPA
II
Fields argues that at least one of the jurors was actually or presumptively biased, thereby violating his Sixth Amendment rights. Fields also claims that the jury improperly considered inflammatory testimony about the race of the women to whom he was talking at the time of his arrest, and that the jury was racially prejudiced against him. Individually and cumulatively, Fields submits, these errors invalidate his convictions.
A
Fields contends that, during voir dire, juror Hilliard concealed material facts and gave misleading answers relating to the kidnap, robbery, and rape of his wife. In his view, complete and honest answers would have revealed that Hilliard was presumptively biased against Fields and unable to view the evidence objectively. Further, Fields argues that Hilliard discussed the case with his wife during the trial and thus was actually biased, or became so, as the case progressed.
Responding to the trial judge’s posted questions during voir dire,
Juror Hilliard: Okay. My wife was assaulted and beaten, robbed, two years ago Christmas.
The Court: That occurred here in Los Angeles?
Juror Hilliard: Yes. In Lynwood.
The Court: Was anyone ever arrested in connection with that incident?
Juror Hilliard: Not to my knowledge.
The Court: All right. In other words, your wife never went to court as a witness?
Juror Hilliard: No. She went to a couple of lineups.
The Court: Some of the charges involved in this case are robberies. Do you think it is going to make it difficult for you to be a fair, impartial juror in the case now pending before this court as a result of the experience your wife went through?
Juror Hilliard: I doubt it. I think I’d base it strictly on the charges and the evidence that’s presented.
*971 Juror Hilliard: ... I don’t see any reason I couldn’t look upon this thing strictly on the evidence involved.
The Court: And you would accept and follow the law given to you by the court and apply it, to the best of your ability, to the facts as you determine them to be?
Juror Hilliard: Definitely.
Jones asked no questions of Hilliard, and he was seated without challenge.
In 1993, Fields obtained declarations of Hilliard, his wife Diane, and other jurors. Diane Hilliard indicates that during the incident juror Hilliard described, she was accosted at gun-point by a young African American male in his early twenties, bound, blindfolded, driven to a secluded area, beaten, raped and robbed. The attacker told Hilliard’s wife that he knew where she lived and would be back to “finish you off.” He was never apprehended. These events had a radical effect on the Hilliards’ lives. Mrs. Hilliard says that during the trial she began to suspect her accoster might be Fields; she asked her husband if she could go to the courtroom, but he said no. One juror’s declaration indicates that Hilliard often talked about his wife, but does not say what about; another states he was aware that Hilliard’s wife had been raped. In a 1995 declaration, Hilliard states that he “was an objective and impartial juror and never confused the events that occurred to my wife with the facts presented in the Fields case. I did not urge the jury members to follow any course of action because of my wife’s experience. To the contrary. I was one of the jurors who initially defended Fields in deliberations.” A 1999 declaration avers that Hilliard stands by his 1995 declaration.
The district court found that Fields was not denied his right to an impartial jury. It applied the rule from McDonough Power Equipment, Inc. v. Greenwood,
Fields posits that Hilliard’s responses were misleading and that his declaration of impartiality was equivocal. Fields further asserts that Hilliard and his wife “repeatedly discussed the facts of the Fields case”; that Hilliard “explained” to his wife he did not want her to attend trial because he did not want “it to create a problem”; and that Hilliard did not want to create a loophole and let Fields off.
The state argues that Hilliard was not actually biased. Further, it notes that there is no evidence that Hilliard intentionally withheld the fact that his wife had been raped, and that absent evidence that he lied, to hold that he was presumptively biased would be a new rule barred by Teague v. Lane,
[1] The Sixth Amendment guarantees criminal defendants a fair trial, which assumes in a case tried to a jury “a jury capable and willing to decide the case solely on the evidence before it.” McDonough,
We have analyzed juror bias under two theories, actual bias and implied bias. Either may support a challenge for cause. Gonzalez,
The district court did not address the question of implied bias, reaching its conclusion that Fields was not denied his right to an impartial jury based only on its view that Hilliard did not intentionally or dishonestly withhold information and stated that he could be an impartial juror. This may well be correct, as there is no direct evidence that Hilliard’s answers were intentionally misleading. He disclosed that his wife had been assaulted, beaten and robbed; no follow-up questions were asked, and Hilliard never denied that his wife had been kidnaped or raped. As this court has recognized, jurors may sometimes “misunderstand a question or bend the truth a bit to avoid embarrassment.” Dyer,
The Supreme Court has never explicitly adopted (or rejected) the doctrine of implied bias, but both concurring opinions in McDonough seem to embrace it and the Ninth Circuit has inferred or presumed bias on rare occasions. See, e.g., United States v. Allsup,
Fields primarily relies on Allsup, Eu-banks, and Dyer. In Allsup, two jurors in a bank robbery trial were employees of a different branch of the bank that was robbed. On direct appeal, we held that their relationship to the subject of the trial was too close for them to be impartial, therefore the trial court erred by failing to excuse the jurors for cause. Eubanks was a heroin conspiracy trial, where (again on direct appeal from denial of a motion for new trial) we presumed bias when a juror did not disclose that two of his children were in prison for heroin-related crimes. On a juror qualification form, the juror had indicated that he was married but had no children, and the juror did not respond to a question by the judge on voir dire “have any of you or members of your immediate families ever been personally interested in the defense of a criminal case or a witness for the defense in criminal case?” Had he answered truthfully, this court believed the trial court would have excused him. In these circumstances, the court concluded that the juror’s sons’ involvement with heroin barred the inference that the juror served impartially. In Dyer, the juror on voir dire in a murder prosecution answered “no” to questions about whether she or any of her relatives had ever been the victim of any type of crime, and whether she or any of her relatives had ever been accused of any offense other than traffic'cases. In fact, the juror’s brother had been shot and killed six years earlier, and her husband was then in jail. We concluded that the juror plainly lied, and that her lies gave rise to an inference of implied bias on her part. See also Green v. White,
Fields submits that a similar kind of emotional involvement is present in this
Tinsley is also instructive. There, a state prisoner who was convicted of rape contended in his § 2254 petition that he was denied a fair trial because one juror, Smith, was biased. Smith stated during voir dire that she was a psychiatric social worker who was trained to deal with rape victims, but notwithstanding the nature of the charges involved in Tinsley’s case, would be able to be a fair juror. She said that she did not recall counseling any rape victims. However, it turned out that she had testified once in behalf of a rape victim, an experience she found anxiety provoking. At a hearing on Tinsley’s motion for new trial, Smith testified that she had been fair as a juror and had no recollection of thinking about the prior counseling episode during deliberations. Acknowledging that bias may be implied in “those extreme situations where the relationship between a prospective juror and some aspect of the litigation is such that it is highly unlikely that the average person could remain impartial in his deliberations under the circumstances,”
Beyond what these cases indicate, it is an open question whether dishonesty is required before bias may be found. We took note of this in Dyer, observing that “[bjecause we conclude that [the juror] lied, we need not decide whether dishonesty is a necessary predicate to a finding of juror bias.” Dyer,
Regardless, Fields argues that Diane Hilliard’s declaration creates a reasonable inference of improper communications. We agree that this possibility is not foreclosed. The district court did not address this issue, which leaves us without findings. As we are remanding in any event for an evidentiary hearing on Hilliard’s bias, we leave it to the district court in the first instance to determine whether Hilli-ard and his wife had any discussions during the trial about its subject matter that affected Hilliard’s ability to be fair and impartial. We remand to the district court to hold an evidentiary hearing on this point.
B
Fields argues that the jury improperly considered testimony by James Mateer, a Los Angeles police officer who was present when Fields was arrested, that the two women Fields was conversing with at the time of his arrest were white. The details are spelled out in Part IV(A), infra. The trial judge sustained defense counsel’s objection to the prosecutor’s line of questioning, ordered the testimony struck from the record, and instructed the jury to disregard it. Nevertheless, Fields submits, the jury considered this evidence, which he says was racially inflammatory, based on two juror declarations adduced in 1993. One indicates that it was obvious that several white jurors were more upset by the crimes against Colleen Coates, a white victim, than by the murder of Rosemary Cobbs, an African American, and that “[djuring the penalty deliberations, several jurors mentioned how if defendant would kill a member of his own race then he would not hesitate to kill a white person.” Another states that she thought if defendant would murder someone of his own race then he would certainly be willing to murder someone of a different race. This juror believed that some other jurors may have also thought about these factors. However, these declarations are inadmissible under Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b) because they pertain to internal influences on the jury’s deliberations. See Tanner v.
Fields argues otherwise, first because the declarations were presented to the California Supreme Court in support of his exhaustion petition and are thus part of the record of the state proceedings that “shall be admissible” in the federal habeas proceeding under pre-AEDPA § 2254(f).
Second, Fields maintains that the juror declarations are admissible even under Rule 606(b) because they show extraneous prejudice. While this may be true if they did, see, e.g., United States v. Henley,
Fields alternatively contends that if the declarations cannot be considered, the jury’s consideration of Mateer’s stricken testimony denied him due process. We do not think so, for even if the jury did consider the fact that Fields was talking with two white women when he was arrested, evidence of Fields’s guilt on all counts was so overwhelming that we cannot say this was prejudicial. It could not possibly have had a substantial or injurious effect in determining the verdict. Brecht v. Abrahamson,
C
Fields’s claim that several of the jurors were racially prejudiced against him fails for the same reasons.
D
Fields contends that his convictions must be overturned because of the cumulative effect of jury misconduct. “Although no single trial error examined in isolation is sufficiently prejudicial to warrant reversal, the cumulative effect of multiple errors may still prejudice a defendant.” United States v. Frederick,
Ill
Fields asserts that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance by failing to conduct meaningful voir dire, specifically, by failing to question at all six of the jurors who were ultimately empaneled, including Hilli-ard. Fields argues that competent counsel, given Hilliard’s disclosure and his equivocal answer as to his ability to be impartial, would have questioned him further about the incident, challenged him for cause, and if that challenge were denied, exercised a peremptory challenge to remove him from the jury.
To prevail on the merits under Strickland v. Washington,
Fields must “affirmatively prove prejudice.” Id. at 693,
Whether counsel was deficient is a close call. On the one hand, it is tough to imagine why he did not pursue what kind of assault Hilliard’s wife suffered, given that the non-capital charges against Fields included rape. On the other hand, it may be that he decided not to emphasize Fields’s behavior through additional questioning, or that counsel believed Hilliard’s statement that he could base his decision strictly on the evidence despite his wife’s experience. At oral argument the state suggested another possibility: that counsel may have wanted to keep Hilliard on the jury because he was African-American.
We confronted somewhat similar situations in Wilson v. Henry,
We do not know what Jones’s thinking was, which makes it difficult to conclude that it was a reasonable strategic decision. We assume there was no prejudice from counsel’s failure to voir dire any juror other than Hilliard because Fields makes no argument that there was; however, we cannot say whether failure to ask questions of Hilliard beyond the court’s voir dire was prejudicial until the issue of Hilli-ard’s impartiality is finally determined. See Gonzalez,
At the end of the day, the issue of Hilliard’s bias and whether counsel was ineffective will turn on the same determination. But apart from the issue of Hilli-ard’s bias, which will be resolved separately, we cannot say that failure to inquire beyond the court’s voir dire was outside the range of reasonable strategic choice or that it would have affected the outcome.
rv
Fields claims that he was denied due process when the prosecutor elicited racially inflammatory testimony from Officer Mateer that Fields was conversing with two white women at the time of his arrest, and urged the jury to view Rosemary Cobb’s murder through the eyes of the victim.
On federal habeas review, we do not ask whether the “prosecutor[’s] remarks were undesirable or even universally condemned.” Darden v. Wainwright,
A
The prosecution called James Mateer, a police officer who worked as a security guard for the Greyhound Bus Lines. He identified Fields as someone he had seen at the depot on October 9, 1978. The prosecutor asked Mateer whether Fields was alone and Mateer responded: “He appeared to be alone, but he was talking to two females.” The prosecutor continued: “White or black?” Mateer answered “white.” Jones’s first objection was overruled, after which Mateer was asked, and answered about their appearance that it “appeared as if they were in distress or were uncomfortable with the defendant’s presence.” The trial court denied Fields’s request for a mistrial, but ordered Mateer’s testimony stricken. The jury was instructed “to just keep those [events and circumstances] out of your memory, you are not to deliberate on them, you are not to consider them; they are not to be discussed by you in any way.” Regardless of whether the inquiries were irrelevant or improper, Fields cannot have been prejudiced. The circumstance was not mentioned again, cf. United States v. Cabrera,
B
In his closing argument, the prosecutor asked the jury to “think of yourself as Rosemary Janet Cobb” and described the crimes committed against her from her perspective. In doing so “[he] inappropriately obscured the fact that his role is to vindicate the public’s interest in punishing crime, not to exact revenge on behalf of an
C
We agree with the district court that the cumulative effect of any purported prose-cutorial misconduct did not render Fields’s trial fundamentally unfair.
V
Fields argues that the trial court’s refusal to sever the capital murder and robbery of Rosemary Cobbs from the non-capital crimes against Gwendolyn Barnett, Cynthia Smith, Colleen Coates, and Clarence Gessendaner, when identity was not at issue, rendered his trial fundamentally unfair by leading the jury to infer criminal propensity and by tainting the jury’s consideration of the weaker capital crime by considering the evidence cumulatively. On habeas review of a state conviction, we have held that
the propriety of a consolidation rests within the sound discretion of the state trial judge. The simultaneous trial of more than one offense must actually render petitioner’s state trial fundamentally unfair and hence, violative of due process before relief pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 would be appropriate.
Featherstone v. Estelle,
We agree with the district court that Fields made no such showing. The evidence submitted in support of Fields’s capital ciime and his noncapital crimes was cross-admissible because the crimes were sufficiently similar to reflect a common modus operandi, and to show motive and intent. See Bean v. Calderon,
VI
Putting aside the issue of possible structural error arising from juror bias,
VII
Fields submits that the prosecutor pursued an improper theory to support the robbery-murder special circumstance that made Fields death-penalty eligible — that Fields robbed Cobbs (a second time) of her purse in the car, whereas to qualify the robbery cannot be merely incidental to a murder.
During his closing argument, the prosecutor stated that Cobbs was forced to write out a check which Fields’s sister cashed and gave to him. Then Fields took Cobbs out and killed her. The prosecutor noted that she had her purse with her and that the purse ended up at Fields’s house in a trash bag with the wallet and cash missing. He went on to state that as far as the check is concerned, the court would instruct that the robbery is complete when the perpetrator has reached a place of safety and is in unchallenged possession of the stolen property. His argument was that Fields was not in unchallenged possession of the check money while Cobbs was still alive or of the purse which Cobbs still had. The California Supreme Court rejected the Attorney General’s argument on appeal that robbery of the purse, contemporaneous with the murder, was alone sufficient to support the special circumstance finding. Fields,
If it were impossible to tell which theory of culpability the jury followed in reaching its verdict, relief might be required. Suniga v. Bunnell,
Conclusion
We affirm on all guilt phase claims except for the claim of juror bias, on which
AFFIRMED IN PART; VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART; SUBMISSION VACATED AND DEFERRED IN PART.
Notes
. The facts are taken from the California Supreme Court's opinion denying Fields’s direct
. In re Dixon,
. The trial court’s written questions included: (1) the prospective juror's business or occupation; (2) the prospective juror’s spouse’s business or occupation; (3) the ages of the prospective juror’s children and their occupations or where they attended school; (4) the general area where the prospective juror lived; (5) the prospective juror's previous jury experience; (6) whether the prospective juror had ever been a crime victim or witness, arrested or charged with a crime, or involved in criminal charges or litigation; (7) whether the prospective juror had any legal or law enforcement background, training or experience; (8) whether the prospective juror had any friends or relatives who were in law or law enforcement; and (9) whether the prospective juror knew of any reason that he or she could not serve as a fair and impartial juror.
. We do not consider whether Fields’s claim is Teague-barred, so that the district court is free to do so after the facts have been determined.
. Tinsley,
. Mrs. Hilliard only declares that when her husband was selected for jury duty and "we” learned something about the facts, she began to suspect that her attacker might be Fields. She does not say that Hilliard told her anything beyond what the case he was selected for was about. She does not say that Hilliard and she discussed the facts repeatedly, just that she kept asking to go to court. She does not say that she told Hilliard of her suspicions about Fields. Nor does Mrs. Hilliard aver that Hilliard told her why he did not want her to attend trial; her declaration states only what she thought Hilliard was thinking. However, Mrs. Hilliard’s state of mind is not material, and her thoughts about Hilliard’s state of mind are simply speculation without foundation.
. This section is now codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2254(g).
. Former California Penal Code section 190.2 provided that a defendant found guilty of first degree murder may be sentenced to death if he "was personally present during the commission of the act or acts causing death, and with intent to cause death physically aided or committed such acts causing death and any of the following additional circumstances exists .... The murder was willful, deliberate, and premeditated and was committed during the commission or attempted commission of any of the following crimes.... Robbery, in violation of Section 211....” Cal.Penal Code, former § 190.2, subd. (c) (emphasis added).
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree with most of Judge Rymer’s thorough and thoughtful opinion. On the issue of possible juror bias, I agree that the declaration of Diane Hilliard, which says a lot about her but very little about Mr. Hilliard, the juror, nevertheless warrants further investigation by way of an evidentiary hearing.
My one point of disagreement concerns the majority’s treatment of Mr. Hilliard’s statements during voir dire. The majority’s decision to remand the case for an evidentiary hearing on actual or implied bias is based on a faulty premise — that the court asked Hilliard a specific question that he answered in a “misleading” or less than “completely forthcoming” manner. The fact is that the court did not ask Hilliard whether any family members or friends had ever been the victim of a crime.
Because the question about family-members-as-victims was never asked, it is puzzling how Hilliard’s voluntary disclosure of the attack on his wife can be characterized as anything but remarkably candid. But even if Hilliard had been asked, “Have any members of your family even been the victim of a crime?” it is hard to understand how Hilliard could be impugned for stating quite truthfully that his wife had been assaulted, beaten, and robbed two years prior. To repeat, this is all academic because the question was never asked. But even if it had been, Hilliard should not have been expected to answer as if he were taking a criminal law exam, identifying by name every conceivable crime that the facts might have suggested. He said that his wife had been “assaulted and beaten, robbed.” That was absolutely true. And to be technical about it, Hilliard disclosed that his wife had been beaten and assaulted, which connotes more than just being beaten.
Because Hilliard was not only truthful but voluntarily forthcoming, I fail to see how this case can possibly be equated with United States v. Eubanks,
That, then, brings us to whether Hilli-ard’s truthful answer should have resulted in his exclusion from the jury sua sponte. “[T]o obtain a new trial ... a party must first demonstrate that a juror failed to answer honestly a material question on voir dire, and then further show that a correct response would have provided a valid basis for challenge for cause.” McDonough Power Equip. v. Greenwood, 464
As for the second prong, neither the petitioner nor the majority has cited a single case in which a prospective juror was deemed impliedly biased solely on the strength of truthful answers revealing that a prospective juror’s family member had, years before, been the victim of a similar crime, particularly when the prospective juror had assured the court that the other incident would not affect his ability to be fair and impartial. The trial judge saw and heard Hilliard and was uniquely positioned to assess Hilliard’s credibility. The judge’s acceptance of Hilliard’s assurances is entitled to deference. See United States v. Miguel,
All of the implied bias cases cited by the majority, with one exception, concern dishonest answers by prospective jurors. The exception, United States v. Allsup,
I understand what the district judge is supposed to do on remand concerning Diane Hilliard’s declaration: The judge is to determine whether Mr. Hilliard discussed the case with his wife and, if so, whether their discussions affected Hilliard’s impartiality. On the other hand, I haven’t a clue what the district judge is supposed to do, on remand, about Hilliard s truthful answer of 22 years ago that his wife had been beaten, assaulted and robbed, his assurance that he would “look upon this thing strictly on the evidence involved,” and “definitely” “accept and follow the law” and “apply it ... to the facts” to the best of his ability. Because Hilliard’s voir dire statement was true (and voluntarily disclosed to boot), I fail to see what fact the district judge is supposed to find with respect to it. What matters is Hilliard’s state of mind back in 1979, not how he feels about his jury service today.
Because the circumstances of the crime against Mrs. Hilliard are undisputed, the transcript of Mr. Hilliard’s voir dire is all that is needed to decide whether he should have been dismissed sua sponte from the venire. It reveals no constitutional error in Hilliard’s empanelment. Accordingly, I would hold that the petitioner is not entitled to relief on that basis. As for whether Hilliard and his wife had improper communications about the case during the trial, that requires a hearing.
. The questions put to the prospective jurors can be found in footnote three of the majority opinion.
