Aрpellant Anthony Harris appeals his conviction by a jury of armed robbery, D.C.Code §§ 22-2901, -3202 (1989 Repl.), on the grounds that his due process rights were violated when the trial judge failed to remove a potential juror for cause and refused to grant a mistrial when another juror mistakenly failed to respond to a question during voir dire. 1 We affirm.
I
During voir dire, the trial judge posed the Ridley 2 question to potential jurors:
The question is whether any of you, members of your family or very close friends within the past ten years either have been a victim of a crime, a witness to a crime оr accused, that is, charged with having committed a crime. I’m going to repeat the question.
Have any or you or have any members of your family or have any of your close friends either been a victim of a crime, a witness to a crime, whether or not you were summoned to court to testify, or accused or [sic] having committed a crime. I have limited this question to the past ten years, but if there is something significant that happened further back than this ten years, we would want to knоw about that as well.
Juror number 973 answered this question affirmatively and explained that she had been the victim of a pickpocket and the victim of an armed robbery. In response to defense counsel’s questioning, the juror said:
Well, the armеd robbery was pretty traumatizing. I thought I was going to be killed. I really did. Because we all saw them, there were two of them, and they herded us into a room before they left, and I thought this is it, and it’s something I think will be with me all of the rest of my life, but on the other hand, I feel I’m an analytical person and I can deal with facts. It’s hard to call.
Although the trial judge denied a motion to remove juror number 973 for cause, defense counsel removed the juror with a peremptory strike.
Juror number 075, who did not respond to the Ridley question during voir dire, later informed the jury during its deliberations that her son had been convicted of a crime. After being informed of this fact by a jury note, the trial judge conducted an additional voir dire of juror number 075, during which the juror advised that she had misunderstood the Ridley question to include only criminal convictions more than ten years old. After the second voir dire of juror 075, defense counsel renewed his motion for a mistrial, which the trial judge denied.
II
Appellant contends that his due process rights were violated when the trial judge refusеd to strike juror number 973 for cause. We disagree. The trial judge has broad discretion over whether to strike a juror for cause,
Rease v. United States,
Although the juror was a victim of armed robbеry — the same crime of which appellant was charged — the event occurred over 15 years before appellant’s trial, beyond the 10 year scope of the
Ridley
question. While the juror described the incident as “traumatizing,” she was nоt physically injured and was never subsequently involved in testifying against, or identifying, her attacker. Moreover, the juror described herself as an “analytical person”
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who could “deal with facts.”
3
The trial judge had the opportunity to evaluate the juror’s demeanor, and his сonclusion that she could be impartial was not unwarranted.
See State v. Singletary,
Ill
Appellant also contends that his due process rights were violated when the trial judge denied his motion for a mistrial after learning that juror number 075 had not responded to the Ridley question despite the fact that her son had been convicted of a crime within the past ten years.
Where a claim of juror partiality is made, “the remedy ... is a hearing in which the defendant has the opportunity to prove actual bias,”
Shannon & Luchs Management Co. Inc. v. Roberts,
the trial court must determine (1) whether it would have excused the juror out of an abundance of caution had the information been revealed on voir dire, and (2) whether, in the court’s opinion, this disclosure of the information would hаve resulted in a peremptory challenge to the juror.
Id. at 44.
In
Artisst,
the court held that the procedures adopted for post trial disclosures, as in
Shannon & Luchs,
would apply to dis
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closure during trial of juror infirmity.
Artisst, supra,
During consideration of the defense motion for a mistrial, the trial judge asked defense counsel whether he “believed а mistrial would be warranted under the law” if the trial judge concluded that the juror simply misunderstood the Ridley question during voir dire and that the defense would have exercised a peremptory challenge if the information withheld by the juror had been disclosеd. Defense counsel answered this question affirmatively, and expressed his view that the issue did not turn solely on “whether the juror was deliberately being misleading or not.” The trial judge responded by saying, “Well, ... I think you’re wrong,” and denied the motion for a mistrial. This colloquy between the judge and defense counsel followed defense counsel’s explanation to the judge of why the defense would have struck the juror. 6
In
Shannon & Luchs Management Co. Inc. v. Roberts, supra,
The government maintains, and we agree, that the circumstances involving the juror’s son did not demonstrate actual bias or that the juror would properly have been struck for cause.
7
Her responses show, as the government maintains, that “she appeared willing and able to decide the case
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impartially on the basis of the facts presented, and ... nothing in her personal circumstance indicates actual partiality on her part sufficient to constitute a challenge for cause.” Contrary to appellant’s contention, there is no basis for finding a рresumption of bias.
8
The juror stated that she thought she had been treated fairly by the prosecution and defense at her son’s trial, and the relationship between the charges against appellant and the experiences of thе juror’s son were more attenuated than cases involving a juror’s involvement in the same type of criminal situation as underlies the charges against appellant.
See
cases cited in Part II,
supra; cf. United States v. Jones,
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment.
Notes
. Appellant was ácquitted of one count of perjury, D.C.Code § 22-2512.
.
United States
v.
Ridley,
. Appellant argues that the juror could not have been "completely impartial” because, in response tо defense counsel’s questioning about whether her experience might "color” the way she would “see the case” against appellant, she said, "It’s hard to call.” However, the appropriate standard for review by this court is not whether the juror was "completely impartial,” but rather whether the juror was manifestly partial.
See, e.g., Allison v. United States,
. Juror number 075 explained to the trial judge during the second voir dire that she misunderstood the Ridley question to be inquiring about convictions more than ten years оld.
. The possible deprivation of the exercise of a peremptory challenge does not mandate reversal because the relevant issue is whether the juror was actually biased against the defendant.
Shannon & Luchs Management Co. Inc. v. Roberts, supra,
. At trial defense counsel indicated to the judge that jurors who had displayed similar charaсteristics to juror 075 had been peremptorily challenged by the defense during voir dire. Specifically, defense counsel pointed out that he had struck jurors whose family members had been charged with crimes and that he "presumptively did not wаnt ... jurors on [his] cases who have been government witnesses, especially when they have been government witnesses in a charge that is at issue.” He expressed particular concern about the juror who testified for the government against her son on an armed robbery charge. Counsel reminded the judge that the defense had used all of its peremptory chal- ' lenges and would have used one here, pointing out that, according to his notes, nine or ten of the jurors had nо contacts with the criminal justice system.
.Appellant’s reliance on
Jackson v. United States,
. Appellant cites authorities for the proposition that there was a presumption of partiality requiring a new trial. He cites
Jackson, supra
note 7,
