This case raises the perennially difficult issue of the proper balance between two of our society’s most treasured guarantees: the fair administration of justice (including, most importantly, a defendant’s right to a fair trial) and the right to freedom of expression. In this appeal from the denial of his petition for 'a writ of habeas corpus, petitioner Frank Turney alleges that the Alaska jury tampering statute under which he was convicted is overbroad in violation of the First Amendment. As interpreted by the Alaska Suprеme Court, the statute prohibits knowingly communicating with a júror, directly or indirectly, with the intent to influence the outcome of a specific case, unless such communication is permitted by the rules of the proceeding. We conclude that the Alaska Supreme Court has interpreted the statute narrowly enough that it does not reach a substantial amount of protected speech. We therefore affirm the denial of Turney’s petition.
I. BACKGROUND
In July 1994, prior to the commencement of jury selection in the Alaska criminal case State v. Hall in Fairbanks, jury-nullification proponent Frank Turney approached three members of the venire in the courthouse and told them to call the toll-free number of the Fully Informed Jury Association. Some of the individuals Turney lobbied were wearing badges that identified them as jurors. At the time, a person calling the number Turney publicized, 1-800-TEL-JURY, would have heard the following message:
Thank you for calling the Fully Informed Jury Association. FIJA is a nonprofit educational association that wants all Americans to know them rights as jurors to judgе the law itself as well as the facts regardless of the instructions from the judge because jurors cannot be punished, for their verdict. They are the final check and balance on our government, with more power than the President, Congress, or the Supreme Court. To talk to a live person, call 406-793-5550 or we will mail you more free information on jury veto power, if you tell us how you heard of us. Then name and spell your name, address, and zip code. Here’s the tone. [TONE]
Juror Ellis, one of the individuals Turney approachеd, was selected for the petit jury *1199 in State v. Hall. At one point during deliberations, Ellis announced to the other jurors that he had called 1-800-TEL-JURY and that he was changing his vote in the case because “I can vote what I want.” He urged the other jurors to call the number. The jury was unable to reach a decision and was excused. .
Turney was subsequently indicted for three counts of jury tampering .and charged by information with two counts of criminal trespass in the first degree. Alaska’s jury tampering statute provides:
A person commits the crime of jury tampering if the person directly or indirectly communicates with a juror other than as permitted by the rules governing the official proceeding with intent to
(1) influence the juror’s vote, opinion, decision, or other action as a juror'; or
(2) otherwise affect the outcome of the official proceeding.
Alaska Stat. § 11.56.590(a). A “juror” for purposes of this statute is “a member of an impanelled jury or a person who has been drawn or summoned to attend as a prospective juror.” Id. § 11.56.900(3).
The superior court denied Turney’s motion to dismiss the charges. The Alaska Supreme Court permitted an interlocutory appeal and affirmed the denial of Turney’s motion to dismiss.
Turney v. State,
Turney was convicted at trial of three counts of jury tampering. The court sentenсed him to fourteen months on each count to run concurrently, with all but sixty days suspended, plus a $2,500 fine (mostly suspended), 160 hours of community service work, and six years of probation. On direct appeal, the Alaska Court of Appeals affirmed; in an unpublished opinion that rejected Turney’s overbreadth and vagueness arguments as foreclosed by the Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in the interlocutory appeal. One judge dissented. The Alaska Supreme Court denied Turney’s petition for review.
In 2001, Turney petitioned the fеderal district court in Alaska for a writ of habeas corpus, which the court denied. According to the court, the Alaska Supreme Court’s overbreadth decision was fully in accord with United States Supreme Court jurisprudence, which makes clear that attempts to interfere with the administration of justice by improperly influencing jurors are not entitled to First Amendment protection. The court also rejected Turney’s vagueness challenge and his argument that his Sixth Amendment rights were violated because the jury was not presented with every element of the crime of jury tampering. The district court denied a certificate of appealability, but we granted one with respect to the question of whether Alaska’s jury tampering statute is overbroad. We therefore have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2253(a).
II. ANALYSIS
A district court’s denial of habeas relief is reviewed de novo.
Beardslee v. Woodford,
the adjudication of the claim (1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable аpplication of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or (2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d). The “clearly established Federal law” inquiry refers to “the governing legal principle or principles set forth by the Supreme Court at the time the state court renders its' decision.”
Lockyer v. Andrade,
A state court decision is “contrary to” cleаrly established Supreme Court precedent where the court “applies a rule that contradicts the governing law set forth in [the Supreme Court’s] cases,” or “confronts a set of facts that are materially indistinguishable from a decision of [the Supreme] Court and nevertheless arrives at a result different from[that] precedent.”
Williams v. Taylor,
The “highly deferential standard for evaluating state-court rulings” reflects a respect for state courts as “part of a coequal judiciary” and as “competent interpreters of federal law.”
Clark v. Murphy,
In applying the standards of 28 U.S.C. § 2254, the relevant state decision is the “last reasoned decision by a state court.”
Robinson v. Ignacio,
Under the doctrine of First Amendment overbreadth, a litigant may mount a facial attack on a statute that restricts protected speech even, if the litigant’s own speech is unprotected.
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
When examining a law for over-breadth, a court's first task is to determine “whether the enactment reaches a substantial amount of constitutionally protected conduct.”
Id.
(citation and internal
*1201
quotation marks omitted). Where a state statute challenged for overbreadth has been construed by the state’s highest court, the scope of the statute is to be assessed in light of the construction that court has given.
See Osborne v. Ohio,
The Alaska Supreme Court’s decision in Turney’s case provides a detailed analysis of the state’s jury tampering statute. Specifically, the court held that the statute prohibits only “communications intended to affect
how the jury decides a specific case
” where the speaker has “intent to
influence the outcome
” and
knows
he or she is communicating with a juror.
Turney,
In light of the Alaska Supreme Court’s opinion, the scope of the jury tampering statute can be described as follows: the law criminalizes knowingly communicating with' a juror, directly or indirectly, with the intent to influence the outcome of a specifiс case, unless such communication is permitted by the rules of the proceeding. We must now determine whether this prohibition sweeps in a substantial amount of speech that is constitutionally protected.
The Supreme Court has developed robust protections for speech concerning judicial proceedings. In a line of cases beginning with
Bridges v. California,
In these cаses, the Court applied various versions of the then-evolving “clear and present danger” test to evaluate restrictions on speech concerning judicial proceedings.
See id.
at 271,
However, speech to jurors about pending cases presents a special problem because of its grave implications for defendants’ right to a fair trial and the public’s interest in fair and impartial justice. In
Remmer v. United States,
Even in the strongly speech-protective decisions of the
Bridges-Wood
line, the Court was careful to distinguish the publications it deemed protected under the First Amendment from speech aimed at improperly influencing jurors. As the Court observed in
Bridges:
“The very word ‘trial’ connotes decisions on the evidence and arguments properly advanced in open court. Legal trials are not like elections, to be won through the use of the meeting-hall, the radio, and the newspaper.”
Reading all of these cases together leads us to conclude that the First Amendment, while generally; quite protective of speech concerning judicial proceedings, does not shield the narrow but significant category of communications to jurors made outside of the auspices of the offiсial proceeding and aimed at improperly influencing the outcome of a particular case. What Alaska’s jury tampering statute covers in the main, then, is speech that is not protected by the First Amendment.
Turney urges us to apply Brandenburg and hold that the State may not proscribe speech to jurors unless it is likely imminently to undermine the administration of justice. But the Supreme Court has never applied any version of the clear and present danger test to communications made knowingly to jurors with the intent to influence the outcome of a specific case. On the contrary, as we have observed, the Court has expressly distinguished such communications from the speech it has protected under the First Amendment and as a general matter has demonstrated little tolerance for improper communications with jurors. Thus the fact that the Alaska Supreme Court declined to apply Brandenburg to the jury tampering statute did not render that court’s decision “contrary to” Supreme Court precedent.
Despite its primary focus on unprotected speech, the Alaska statute is nonetheless overbroad if it covers a substantial amount of protected speech. “[T]he possible harm to society in permitting some unprotected speech to go unpunished is outweighed by the possibility that protected speech of others may be muted.... ”
Broadrick,
With respect to the first example, it is doubtful that the statute as construed by the Alaska Supreme Court sweeps as broadly as Judge Mannheimer fears. In his dissent, Judge Mannheimer posited a detailed hypothetical in which a juror is told by her daughter to avoid reading the newspaper so she does not encounter publicity about the case оn which she is serving as a juror, the juror’s husband advises her to contact the police after she receives a threatening phone call, and a police officer instructs the juror to notify the trial judge of the phone call. Judge Mannheim-er contended that all three of these contacts would be criminal under Alaska’s jury tampering statute because all three speakers communicated with the juror, knowing she was a juror, with the intent to influence her actions as a juror in a particular case.
Wе disagree with Judge Mannheimer’s analysis of this hypothetical, because one element of the statute (as construed) is not met: the intent to influence the
outcome
of a particular ease. None of the three innocent jury . communications posited by Judge Mannheimer is “intended to affect
*1204
how the jury decides
a specific case.”
Turney,
Judge Mannheimer’s second example — ■ political demonstrators, situated immediately outside a courthouse, shouting to everyone approaching the courthouse fervent opinions about the guilt or innocence of the defendant being tried inside — raises challenging questions about the proper balance between due process and freedom of expression. But we need not engage in the diffiсult task of balancing fundamental rights with respect to courthouse demonstrations, because the Supreme Court already has.
In
Cox v. Louisiana,
Whoever, with the intent of interfering with, obstructing, or impeding the administration of justice, or with the intent of influencing any judge, juror, witness, or court officer, in the discharge of his duty pickets or parades in or near a building housing a court of the State of Louisiana shall be fined not more than five thousand dollars or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.
Id.
at 560,
While" Alaska’s statute is directed at a different set of communications than the Louisiana statute at issue in
Cox,
the former is no broader in -its applicability to courthouse demonstrations than the latter. In fact, the Alaska statute’s applicability to courthouse demonstrations is more limited than that of the Louisiana statute, as the Alaska law reaches only communications made
to a juror
with the intent
to influence the outcome of a particular case,
as opposed to all communications made “with the intent оf interfering with, obstructing, or impeding the administration of justice, or with the intent of influencing any judge, juror, witness, or court officer, in the discharge of his duty.”
Id.
at 560,
A third area in which Alaska’s statute could intrude into the realm of protected expression is the mass publication of political ideas. For example, the terms of the statute could be construed to apply to a person who takes out a newspaper or television advertisement supporting a particular outcome in a pending case (e.g., “OJ Was Framed!”). The ad is an indirect communication with the- newspaper’s or television station’s entire audience. If that *1205 audience includes a juror in the case, the purchaser of the ad has communicated with a juror, other than as permitted by the rules of the proceeding, with the intent of influencing the outcome of a specific case.
The Alaska Supreme Court has specifically addressed our concerns on this score. The court observed that the statute’s implied scienter requirement would prevent application of the statute to mass communications of this type, because the speaker would have to
know
that she or he was communicating with a juror in order to be guilty of jury tampering.
Turney,
It is possible that Alaska’s jury tampering statute may cover one or two instances of constitutionally protected speech to jurors. But a law may not be held invalid on its face “merely because it is possible to conceive of a single impermissible application.”
Hill,
III. CONCLUSION
When government restricts the expression of ideas, alarm bells should sound for all of us. The freedom of speech — including both a speaker’s freedom to convey an idea, and a listener’s freedom to receive it — is at the heart of the protections that our Constitution guarantees so that our society may remain a free one. The fact that judicial proceedings can be sensitive and controversial does not diminish the importance of vigorous national debate on matters concerning the administration of justice,
But pur courts will be unable to carry out their vital functions — including the weighty task of enforcing the guarantees of our Constitution — if jurors are not insulated from influences that could undermine their ability to decide the cases before them fairly and impartially. “Due process requires that the accused receive a trial by an impartial jury free from outside influences.”
Sheppard,
The Alaska Supreme Court has carefully narrowed the state’s jury tampering statute so that it operates in service of the latter constitutional command without substantially impinging on thе former. Given this construction, the Alaska Supreme Court’s conclusion that the jury tampering statute is not overbroad in violation of the First Amendment was not “a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). We therefore affirm the district court’s denial of habeas relief.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The court also upheld the statute against a vagueness challenge and rejected Turney’s argument that he fell outside the definition of criminal trespass. See id. at 542-45.
We discuss the Alaska Supreme Court’s overbreadth holding in detail below.
