The appellant was convicted in 1975 of the murder and rape of Joan Delight Bryan. The evidence showed that the appellant had gone to the victim’s farmhouse while her husband was away. While there, the appellant raped the victim, committed sodomy on her, and ended up fatally shooting her in the head in the presence of her four-year-old daughter. The appellant received the death penalty for the murder and rape convictions. On direct appeal to this court, the convictions were affirmed, as was the death sentence for murder; the death sentence for rape was set aside.
Gibson v. State,
1. At the appellant’s trial, he filed a challenge to the array of the grand and traverse juries on the ground that there was a "systematic, intentional and discriminatory exclusion” of women, Negroes, and young adults between 18 and 30 years of age from the array of the grand and traverse juries, thereby violating his rights guaranteed by the due process and equal protection clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions. The trial court overruled the jury challenge. On direct appeal, this court affirmed, concluding that the grand and traverse juries were composed of a representative cross section of the population of the county.
Gibson v. State,
In the first enumeration of error, the appellant argues that his jury challenge should be reconsidered because of a change in the law brought about by the subsequent decision of the United States Supreme Court in Duren v. Missouri, — U.S. — (99 SC 664, 58 LE2d 579) (1979). The appellant correctly points out that under Duren the requirement that juries be selected from a representative cross section of the community is rooted,
2. The appellant was arrested on April 14, 1975. Counsel was appointed to represent him the following day. In early May, the district attorney enlisted a prisoner confined with the appellant, a Mr. Paul Dietrich, to engage in conversation with the appellant and elicit damaging statements from him concerning the crimes with which he was charged. This the prisoner accomplished.
At trial, Dietrich was called as a witness, and he testified that the appellant told him that he had been watching the victim for a time and that he had gone to her home for the purpose of raping her. The defense objected to introduction of this testimony and moved for a mistrial. After conducting a hearing outside of the presence of the jury, the trial judge ordered the testimony stricken from the record on the ground that it violated the trial court’s pretrial discovery order. The jury was ordered to disregard the testimony. The motion for mistrial was overruled.
In the second enumeration of error, the appellant argues that the use of Dietrich’s testimony at trial violated his Sixth Amendment right to counsel, citing Massiah v. United States,
Judgment affirmed.
