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Harvey v. State
835 P.2d 1074
Wyo.
1992
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*1 pur Error Brady 9. Cumulative exculpatory evidence effectively, it and used poses "if disclosed Phillips’ final issue amounts claim of convic may make the difference between A claim of cumulative error. cumulative Bag acquittal.” United States v. tion and depends being recognized. upon error error 667, 676, 105 S.Ct. ley, 473 U.S. State, 196 (Wyo. Thom v. 792 P.2d (1985). However, failure to L.Ed.2d 481 1990). case. No error exists provide useful to defense but evidence Finding brought by error in the issues no change the result does not likely not appellant, this case is Giglio v. require reversal. United Affirmed. 92 S.Ct. (1972). In order L.Ed.2d 104 to warrant URBIGKIT, C.J., (dissent dissents to be im failing potential to disclose reversal date, at a filed later see evidence, peachment the evidence must be (1992)). P.2d “material,” simply The not favorable. Supreme Court has articu United States following if test determine

lated the is “material”:

evidence material if there is a

The evidence is that, probability had the evi-

reasonable defense, been disclosed

dence proceeding have been

result of would probability” A “reasonable different. Jetty HARVEY, Appellant Lee probability sufficient to undermine con- (Defendant), in the outcome. fidence The at 3383. Wyoming, STATE not withheld here is material un- evidence (Plaintiff). Appellee der this test. No. 90-113. witnessing Lacey testified the abduc truck, tion, Wyoming. following notifying Court of police. Evidence of these events was also 11, 1992. June presented through testimony of the vic July Rehearing Denied tim, co-conspirator Harvey, and Phillips’ police officers. other evidence various overwhelmingly

so established that the vic truck, put in the grabbed,

tim was place appellant

truck travelled to the where by police real apprehended

was that it was

ly Lacey dispute is all without —and clearly these testified to. With facts so

established, credibility Lacey’s no dif made testimony His could have been

ference. It, therefore,

totally discounted. not probability in that there was

material

sufficient to undermine confidence The prosecution’s the case.

outcome of Lacey’s background infor give

failure Phillips Brady. does not violate

mation Buchanan, 891 F.2d

See States Cir.1989), (10th cert. denied L.Ed.2d 958 *2 Healy Healy (argued),

Stuart S. & Kinnaird, Sheridan, appellant. Gen., Joseph Meyer, Sylvia Atty. B. Hackl, Gen., Deputy Atty. Byrne, Karen A. Gen., (ar- Hugh Atty. Kenny Sr. Asst. Gen., gued), Atty. appellee. Sr. Asst. THOMAS, URBIGKIT, C.J., and Before CARDINE, GOLDEN, MACY JJ. CARDINE, Justice.

Jetty Harvey challenges Lee his convic- conspiracy kidnapping. tion for to commit walking along Phillips Elk Street. prior kidnapping, His convictions for which woman he objective conspiracy, grab said woman. Har was the wanted Phillips vey to a considered this a dare. turned sexual assault were reversed due around, Harvey truck asked the violation. I). The if wanted a ride. The woman (Wyo.1989) (Harvey 774 P.2d 87 woman she *3 attempted ignore but, him Harvey con- to after the presents appeal issues in this trial, pre- stopped, Harvey exited truck jeopardy, speedy and truck the and cern double her questions, plus Harvey an con- stood front of her. told she publicity trial issue have Harvey’s going grabbed the was to a ride and her cerning use of allocution past Harvey sentencing at after his first as she tried to run him. statement the up, being felt picked her and she herself trial. Inside truck pulled into the truck. the she affirm. We pulled The into the seat. truck was back Harvey presents following the issues: left the of the abduction. scene jeopardy clause 1. —Does the double Swazo, help Harvey of and with Phil- Fifth Amendment to the United lips, her clothes. removed Swazo kissed prohibit States Constitution the State vagina. and her licked her breasts and conspir- prosecuting Appellant for from put vagina fingers his into Swazo her by relying acy kidnapping to commit attempted penetrate vagina to her with his evidence of his conduct which con- upon Harvey Phillips laughed, jeered penis. offense and stitutes the substantive and made lewd comments as Swazo as- prior as convic- served the basis for stopped, Phillips The saulted her. truck Appellant kidnapping? tion of seat, began turned around his and he to Appellant’s to a 2. —Has the time, pants. Harvey remove his At that by his speedy trial denied reason of been cops.” said “Oh shit. It’s the prosecution? second police to were alerted the abduction Appellant deprived been 3. —Has the man, by delivery a pizza and assault Ron by rights public impar- a trial of his to an Lacey, sitting counting who was his car jury guaranteed by the Sixth tial he La- tip money when saw abduction. Amendment to United States Consti- cey as it followed the truck left scene by having defend himself tution to abduction, Interstate drove onto conspiracy charges jury to a and entered a trailer exited the interstate persons prior all of his who were aware there, Lacey From went to a tele- court. underlying on the substantive conviction authori- phone and alerted law enforcement inflammatory pretrial pub- offenses from using ties 911. licity? 9, 1986, charged January Harvey On —Did trial commit re- 4. kidnapping and sexual assault with allowing error statements versible degree aiding abetting first those Appellant at the allocution made I, A Harvey P.2d at 90. crimes. portion sentencing hearing follow- 21, 1987, charges July began those on on conviction to used ing his initial guilty on Harvey was found those prosecution in against him in the second following- charges three-day a trial. We Appellant’s constitutional violation conviction because of a reversed the process? rights silence due court to trial violation and directed the trial at indictment. 774 P.2d 98. dismiss the FACTUAL BACKGROUND 5,May was issued on 1989. Our decision January 5, During evening at Id. 87. passenger in the seat Harvey was the front 7, 1989, complaint charging pickup July truck On extended-cab driven an kidnap- Harvey conspiracy to commit Phillips Springs. in Rock Phil with Everett See commit sexual as- (Wyo.1992) ping conspiracy lips 835 P.2d 1062 25, 1989, July Harvey II). filed. On Swazo sat the back sault was (Phillips David prohibition petition for a writ of passed truck filed of the truck. The seat petition Jeopardy this court. We denied the Double Clause bars a [T]he if, subsequent September prosecution 1989. ex rel. an State establish essential element County County, charged offense Sweetwater prosecution, government in that (Wyo.1989). September P.2d 291 On will prove conduct that constitutes an dropped conspiracy offense the State for which already the defendant has kidnapping charge, apparently commit been prosecuted. negotiations. pursuant plea bargain conspiracy kidnap- State refiled to commit II, Phillips 2087. 835 P.2d at ping charges again on November 1989. However, 1067. a difference exists be- charging Harvey An information with con- prove tween the conduct needed to an of- spiracy to commit sexual assault was filed prove fense and the evidence introduced to An in district court on November *4 2093; Grady, conduct. 110 S.Ct. at charging conspiracy him information with II, Thus, Phillips at 835 P.2d 1067. in the — kidnapping filed on to commit was Novem- Felix, later case of United States v. 21, 18, 1989, 1989. On December ber -, 1377, U.S. 112 S.Ct. 118 L.Ed.2d 25 certifying district court issued an order (1992), which involved a second trial on questions Wyoming Supreme Court. conspiracy charges, the United States Su- questions jeopar- These centered on double Court, preme referring quota- to the above trial, dy, speedy prosecution and vindictive Grady, recognized tion from and then re- issues. We remanded the matter to district uncertainty solved the and confusion cre- questions court with the unanswered on by Grady ated when it stated: 2, January 1990. context, Taken out of literally, and read language supports the defense of Harvey moved dismissal of for jeopardy. double But we decline to read charges change pre- or a of venue due to language expansively, so because of 14, publicity on November 1989. The Grady the context which arose and question court reserved the until trial an because of difficulties which have al- 29,1989. filed Decem- order November On ready interpretation. arisen in its 27, 1989, pretrial ber the court issued a Felix, Then, quoting 112 at 1383-84. S.Ct. stating attempt that it to seat order would approval Bay- from United States v. County jury a in Sweetwater before consid- er, 532, 1394, 331 67 L.Ed. U.S. S.Ct. 91 ering moving Jury the venue. selection (1947), the Court stated: 8, 1990, began January on and concluded January Opening here, 1990. statements language applicable pointed- In we given, testimony began on Janu- were ly stated that “the same overt acts 17,1990 12,1990. January jury ary On charged conspiracy count also a Harvey guilty conspiracy on the found charged proved as substantive kidnapping charge guilty offenses, and not agreement commit for the to do the act conspiracy on the to commit sexual assault is distinct from the act itself.” U.S. [331 15, 1990, charge. Harvey re- 1399]; On March at at see also Pink- S.Ct. years States, a sentence of 12 to 15 ceived erton v. 328 U.S. United penitentiary charge 1180, 1182, state on the 90 L.Ed. 1489 S.Ct. he convicted. (“[T]he commission of the substan- conspiracy

tive offense and a to commit separate and distinct offenses ... it are DISCUSSION plea jeopardy is no double [a]nd Jeopardy Double of- a conviction for both defense to fenses”). jeopardy Harvey’s double claim Felix, Conspiracy at 1384. appellant in the com S.Ct. mirrors that of the ease, sepa- offense are completed substantive panion Phillips case of II. we States, Corbin, v. United rate offenses. Iannelli Grady noted that in U.S. 1284, 1289, 95 S.Ct. L.Ed.2d 548 110 S.Ct. proof of different L.Ed.2d 616 Supreme Court held that: the United States person convict for the substantive crimes does violate necessary is conduct protected against each offense. to be double II, 1068; Phillips P.2d jeopardy. conspiracy agreement A is between an Felix, supra, 112 also States v. persons more to do an unlawful see United two or conspiracy complete (holding “long antedating act. The crime of Corbin, made and agreement when an has been any [Grady of these cases performed to act or acts are overt 110 S.Ct. 109 L.Ed.2d 548 design. further the The overt (1990); unlawful Blockburger acts need not themselves. 76 L.Ed. 306 Oklahoma, Harris v. (citations II, omit- Phillips 835 P.2d at 1067 (1977)], and not ted). 6-1-303. also W.S. See them, questioned in rule that constituting the substantive conduct crime, conspiracy a substantive degree crimes of first sexual assault crime, not the ‘same of- commit that are kidnapping is defined as follows: jeopardy purposes,” fense’ double (a) Any inflicts intru- actor who sexual overlap “a proof that mere between two a sexual assault sion on a victim commits prosecutions does not establish double degree in the first if: violation”). jeopardy (i) The actor causes submission *5 through application, victim the actual Speedy 2. Trial reasonably calculated to cause submis- victim, Harvey argument physical the of force or bases his of a sion of span speedy trial violation on the between forcible confinement. time the he the of the incident and time 6-2-302; W.S. I, brought Harvey to trial. P.2d 774 (a) if person guilty kidnapping A of 87, gave opportunity us the to delineate unlawfully his he removes another from speedy and discuss the to a trial as place of residence or business or from guaranteed by the Sixth the Amendment of vicinity the he was at the time of where * * 1,Art. United States Constitution and 10§ the removal *. In Harvey the Constitution. of W.S. 6-2-201. I, speedy “the we stated that trial clock II, Phillips As from Har- the evidence upon starts to run arrest or when the com vey’s kidnapping trial and sexual assault 774 at 94. plaint filed.” P.2d See also conspiracy overlapped. and his trial 307, Marion, 404 United States testimony overlapping evidence included 314-15, 468 L.Ed.2d recounting time she from the victim the MacDonald, and United States Harvey first encountered until her rescue. 1, 6-7, Notwithstanding detailing the ab- evidence Thus, do L.Ed.2d 696 we not exam assault, the of duction and sexual evidence by calculating passage ine this the of issue preceding this the acts entails con- overt 5, 1986, January from the of time date of duct that does not constitute the crimes incident, 8, 1990, January to the date of the rape. Phillips telling Harvey kidnapping or Instead, period we look at the trial. grab Harvey the woman and undertak- filing complaint, from of the first time the so, ing turning the truck (agreeing) do trial, 7, 1989, July until the date truck, street, stopping around on the January 1990. telling going victim she was to have II, Phillips summarized our we woman, ride, stopping approaching the speedy analysis follows: trial her not acts that constitute elements are analysis requires trial we speedy Our degree first the crimes of sexual assault requires four factors. This test However, they balance are conduct kidnapping. (1) length delay; us to look at: agreement the elements of an satisfies (3) (2) delay; de- necessary the reason for the act beforehand an overt speedy assertion of her trial conspiracy. Prosecuting fendant’s prove a right; to the defen- charges prejudice after conviction conspiracy on I, [Phillips Phillips only days. dant. v. State 774 is The time filing from ] P.2d [118] at 121 [Wyo.1989], citing the first information to the date of trial Wingo, 407 U.S. Barker v. S.Ct. with time deducted for delays attributable (1972). However, L.Ed.2d days. Thus, the defendant is 101] we [33 length delay when the is neither conclude Harvey’s right speedy to a “presumptively prejudicial” signifi- nor trial for the conspiracy charges was not cantly long, analysis no further is war- violated.

ranted. 806 P.2d Osborne 3. Publicity Pretrial I, Change (Wyo.1991); Phillips 774 P.2d at Venue 121. II, Phillips explained P.2d 1068. As After Harvey moved to dismiss the below, span charges the time in this change ease between or for of venue due to filing complaint pretrial the date of the publicity, the court reserved the question date of the start of the trial is neither until trial in an order filed Novem “presumptively prejudicial” significant- 27, 1989, nor 1989. ber On December Thus, ly long. calculating after pretrial the time court issued a stating: order span, analyze we need not The Court also indicated that if a jury issue further. could not be obtained Sweetwater County during the week January complaint

Between the time the was first filed to the time of the trial spans days. [1990] the Court would be inclined to move case to either Uinta or Lincoln conspiracy The information on the to com- during counties for trial week charge mit sexual assault was filed on No- January vember 1989. The information on the conspiracy kidnapping charge to commit Jury began January selection was filed on November 1989. Both *6 January and concluded on 1990. Voir in sides indicate their briefs that the inter- occupies pages transcript dire over 900 27, 1989, September val of time from when persons in the record. Some 74 were ex- conspiracy kidnapping to commit jury amined for the in this case. Each 7, 1989, charge dropped, was to November juror individually concerning was examined refiled, charges occupied when were knowledge her about the earlier trial by plea bargain negotiations. Harvey does subsequent per- and reversal. Of the 74 argue span that this him time caused examined, only persons sons ten stated prejudice. filing The time from the of the they knowledge previous had no of the conspiracy first information for to commit However, persons convictions. 43 stated spans sexual to the time of trial assault 66 they opinion Harvey’s had formed no as to days. guilt seating jury, or innocence. After Harvey renewed his motion. The court delays Harvey Two to attributable jury found that the as seated would be fair computation. are subtracted from this Dis impartial and and denied the motion. 204(c) (d); II, Phillips trict Court Rule procedure We have summarized our for Harvey petition 835 P.2d 1068. filed a determining the trial court correct- whether prohibition for a on writ with ly change ruled on a motion for of venue 25, 1989, July Septem which we denied on pretrial publicity due to follows: 18, 1989. 779 Harvey, ber State ex rel. span days. P.2d This is a of 55 It is the of the defendant to On burden 18, 1989, great certifying prejudice an order so that a fair trial December show obtained, State, questions Harvey’s to this court on motion cannot be Collins v. [589 (Wyo.1979)], was entered. We remanded the P.2d 1283 and the defen- case in questions prejudice unan dant must show actual district court with the State, Wyo., January span jurors. on 1990. This is a minds of v. swered Wilcox (1983). Because of days. filing of 15 The time from the of the 670 P.2d 1119 trial, this, change the motion for a of venue complaint to the date of with time logically passed until the delays Harvey, for attributable to cannot be on deducted 1080 appeal. side record on Collins v. any, if is determined prejudice,

extent of State, (Wyo.1979). dire Moss v. P.2d upon voir examination. State, (Wyo.1972)]. However, judicial P.2d notice we take of these [492 “ * * * propriety of the The ultimate test publicity amount of on reversal is change of a of venue is what revealed filing Harvey’s earlier conviction and the * * * ” panel. jury of the voir dire generated conspiracy charges in or State, Wyo., P.2d v. Harvey der to effective assistance ensure Shaffer (1982). judge’s 31 A.L.R.4th appellate Gambling counsel. Devices ruling subject review on venue State, (Wyo.1985); P.2d v. Murray of discretion. an abuse State, (Wyo. Stice v. P.2d (1983); State, 671 P.2d Wyo., 1990). State, P.2d Wyo., 522 Jackson v. case, from announcement of the re- This cert. denied coverage versal the earlier conviction State, Mares culminating in the commencement of trial Wyo., 500 P.2d proceedings, publicity received more than two-pronged adopted a test We have newspa- most cases receive. The determining change whether per were accounts events fair granted pre- venue because should balanced. Some letters to editors and First, publicity. the nature and ex- editorial columns indicate that these events considered; publicity tent of the must be sparked people. certain do emotions We difficulty selecting second, or ease appendix note the material submitted jury along must be considered Harvey’s brief not one-sided. Some ap- prejudice actually amount of rights considers the involved material pears during voir dire examination. our I and makes for a Harvey decision Each of supra. these Murray lively informed debate on these issues. must elements be considered order publicity and nature of the amount the court abused its determine whether requires effect us to examine the it had change of denying ven- discretion jury. ue. expected most It is to fair apparent It is received a jury will have heard about a sen- panel long, jury through a impartial involved case, require- no but there is sational jury selection. Well over half careful *7 juror ignorant ment that a jury duty stated persons of the called for a issues involved in case. facts they had no during dire that formed voir State, supra. totality v. Wilcox opinion Harvey’s guilt innocence as pres- indicate the the circumstances must despite they knew about the case. whatever improper prejudice. ence Weddle Murry, 713 P.2d 202. Out of this See State, (1980). The Wyo., 621 P.2d 231 group, jury was selected that exhibited a question jury on a fair focuses whether apparent in the record. The prejudice no ultimately selected. was Shaffer jury Harvey one acquitted fact State, supra. conspiracy is further indica- counts (Wyo. Murry 713 P.2d jury carefully tion the members of the 1986) added). (emphasis prejudice. considered the evidence without first-prong court’s denial of application of the of We find no error in the Our handicapped change in that of venue or Harvey’s this test is somewhat motion a pretrial public charges. record outright evidence in the dismissal mainly questioning po ity limited on voir dire about their jurors

tential j. Testimony Use Allocution the record knowledge of the case. Outside trial, in the first After conviction court, newspaper reprints from the trial kidnapping Harvey’s sentencing for the concerning provided the case were articles assault, made an Harvey allocu and sexual to his Harvey appendix in an brief. At to the court. his subse- out tion statement do not consider matters Normally we quent conspiracy trial on the charges, the “And then Everett Phillips don’t —I portions State read of his allocution state- know where going. we were pulls He ment' into evidence as follows: into park this trailer hollering, starts Ready, your

MR. FLYNN: ‘I want Honor? some. I want some.’ I says, ‘No, Everett. Let’s time, take the “MR. KINNAIRD: woman your At this Honor, goes, ‘Well, home.’ And he I would like the bitch for Mr. can grabbed suck it.’ And I make a statement that he would like to arm then said, ‘No, make and I Everett. taking We’re [to Court].” her go.’ home. Let’s And that is when I DETECTIVE MAXWELL: “MR. cop go by through saw car HARVEY: I meant window. this woman no harm. said, fact, And I ‘Now stopped cop. I even there is a being her from Let’s just take her harmed at the I home.’ resisting long end. tried before she was even abducted. Everett “And stopped, when we cops, I just was past insistent from two blocks didn’t even know it cops. I could her, her to telling two blocks to me to lights see in the mirror. got Everett out grab her. saying, Grab her. And I was and went back gone to them. He was I ‘No. don’t want this.’ And even when for, anyway, two minutes and there was pulled up I beside her I and rolled down struggle no in the back. There was no window, my by. just she walked I asked hollering, one screaming. just I looked her if she wanted a ride because it was in the mirror. And then I’m looking cold. She never looked at me. She nev- in the mirror back couple minutes or er just kept answered. She her head so, this victim], woman got she be- [the down, her pocket hands in her coat tween the seats and started headed for by. she walked IAnd turned to Everett just driver’s door. And I stepped out said, ‘See, and I she doesn’t even want a of the truck. police And the officer told ride.’ says, you got And he ‘No. All stop me to put my hands on the grab do is her.’ He throws it into re- camper. just That’s what I done until woman, up past verse and backs slap- fight after the They with David Swazo. me, ping grab grab ‘Just her. Just But, cuffed us jail. and took us to at the ” her.’ this, time of all of there was a real— THE COURT: You read that incorrect- factor, there big was a very too of ly Officer. drunk.” THE sorry. WITNESS: I’m “‘Just Officer, MR. you, FLYNN: Thank grab her. Grab her.’ And that’s when I reading. finishes the finally broke got down on it there. out Harvey claims that the use of his allocution stepped out in front her. She statements violated his not to incrimi- me, up head, walked lifted her looked nate himself under the Fifth Amendment said, ‘Hey, at me and I get look. Just of the United States Constitution and Art. give you *8 we’ll ride home.’ And she 1, 11 of the Wyoming Constitution. § turned and walked around me. And origin The right that’s when I of a defendant’s to say, heard Everett allo- ‘Grab her, chicken-shit.’ And that cution—to address having was the fi- the court before nal sentence’pronounced English straw the dare. in com- —lies early mon English law. Under coat, “I grabbed turned and her the practice, shoulder, an accused was not coun- allowed pulled the her off her feet to- competent sel nor was he a witness for pickup. ward the up put Picked her provided himself. Allocution her in the a convicted laying vehicle. She be- only opportunity speak defendant the to up tween the seats with her hands like himself, saying, generally this. She was and its omission would ‘Don’thurt me.’ I said, Annotation, going required ‘No one is have reversal. you.’ to hurt She Neces- * * * Question grabbed legs by sity Sufficiency relaxed. I her the to Defen- boots, said, worry. Anything ‘Don’t No one dant as to Whether He Has to going you.’ to hurt Say Why Not Be Pro- Sentence Should 1082 Him, 1292, Thus, Against criminate him at trial. the Court 96 A.L.R.2d

nounced allowing peti- in (1964). early days Wyoming noted that use trial of In 1295 suppres- it ownership did not consider claim of at a jurisprudence, this court tioner’s to hearing require petitioner if the court failed to reversible error sion would to allocute. properly allow the defendant choose the exercise of two consti- between Territory Wyoming, v. Wyo. 1 Kinsler rights. tutional The Court reversed the (Convicted murderer resentenced 112 “in- petitioner’s conviction because it found in statu using procedures right accordance with one tolerable constitutional The sentencing provisions). omission tory to be in order to should have surrendered did the defendant of the court to address 394, at another.” 88 S.Ct. assert trial, require it require but did However, not a new exercising right a at 976. to al judgment in order to setting aside the require surrendering allocution does compliance requirement. low right preserve one to another. convict- Kef State, 556, 49, Wyo. 73 P. 560 party ed needs to decide whether fer (1903). right to remain silent will be asserted or waived. proce- practice of criminal Under current dure, right to address a defendant’s right of allocution is similar to in sentencing at his is embodied right testify in one’s to own behalf. 33, part: in which states

W.R.Cr.P. recog The United States (a) Sentence. in right testify nizes the one’s own be right a (1) Imposition of half as constitutional embodied Sentence. —Sentence imposed the Sixth Amendment of United States shall be without unreasonable right to delay. Pending sentence the court Constitution call witnesses one’s defendant, continue or alter the behalf and the Fourteenth Amend commit own Rock v. Ar Right imposing process. the court ment of due Before sentence bail. kansas, 44, 51-52, opportunity to U.S. 107 S.Ct. afford counsel an shall 2708-09, speak and shall address defendant 97 L.Ed.2d These rights apply him if he as well to actions state personally and ask wishes at at a his own behalf and courts. 483 U.S. S.Ct. 2708. make statement recognize mitigation right this in our own consti present any information We tution, Const., Wyo. punishment. Art. we § recognize can accused waive 33(a)(1). recognized We have W.R.Cr.P. stand, right, testify take the as wit “constitutionally right to allocution as Only incriminating ness his own behalf. protected.” Christy 731 P.2d “genuine compul obtained statements (Wyo.1987). testimony” spark concerns about sion subsequent at a argues use privilege against self-in violation impermissi- his allocution statement trial of Washing crimination. United States v. allocution, bly compromises right of his his ton, 181, 186-87, self-incrimination, right against Powers v. 1818, 52 L.Ed.2d 238 Simmons process. upon He due relies 32 S.Ct. United U.S. States, (1912). Testimony L.Ed. 19 L.Ed.2d advance voluntarily may used given Simmons, peti- one contention. violating rights. without defendant sought suppressed to have evidence tioners 186-87, at illegal search and seizure due to an *9 to exercise Fourth Amendment of the A defendant’s choice of the violation entirely voluntary; to his to allocution is States Constitution. order court, he is not speak can to the but standing to contest the admission he have prescribe so. do not evidence, petitioner required had claim to do We to or cannot at the defendant can ownership of the evidence. 390 U.S. limits what during A defendant’s state say statements of allocution. S.Ct. at 974. The against him to in- ments be admissible ownership subsequently were used dan, they Wyoming, actually Horn, proceedings, provided Big further are vol- from However, Wyoming, County, untary. if the trial court were to Sheridan who would like to make require confess to criminal a statement to the Court. a defendant to IAnd have a from an in return for letter individual activities his allocution sentence, Harvey, familiar with and I brought Mr. more lenient those statements your the letter pursuant down earlier compulsion would “genuine amount to accept indications would you that a letter right against of the testimony” in violation on his behalf would that I read into the Washington, self-incrimination. record, sir. 1818; at 97 S.Ct. at United States v. (5th Cir.1974). Rodriguez, 498 F.2d COURT: All right. young Will the lady stand. transcript Harvey’s We at examine the MR. Cory Wagon- This is KINNAIRD: sentencing if to determine his statement sen, Your Honor. compulsion. was the result of Before Har- COURT: All right. your right Raise court, vey spoke following took hand, you. you solemnly both of Do place: testimony you’re swear that the about to session; you may COURT: Court is give truth, truth, is the the whole proceedings be seated. are These truth, nothing help you but the so God? 86-11, Criminal Docket No. State of MS. do. WAGONSEN: Jetty Harvey. Lee versus Will please counsel Harvey Mr. and his stand MR. I do. HARVEY: at the lectern. the record show the Let may proceed, COURT: You Mr. Kin- Harvey presence attorney with his Mr. naird. Virgil Mr. Kinnaird. time, MR. At this KINNAIRD: Your you Harvey, arraign- Mr. were earlier Honor, Harvey I’d like for Mr. to make a ed and tried and convicted crime of statement that like to make he would Degree Kidnapping and First Sexual As- the Court. requested you’ve pre-sen- sault. And Harvey then made allocution statement. his investigation, tence which has been and evidence, Following receipt other I’ve read it. Harvey court addressed follows: you Are under the influence of alcohol possi- COURT: I considered the have drugs any or mental or have defect bility probation and I’ve listened to your ability which could to under- affect Kinnaird, Mr. as in the case but feel proceedings? stand these record, Phillips prior Mr. No, MR. sir. HARVEY: crime, nature of the and other factors your you attorney

COURT: Do have compel probation me to believe anything say your behalf or wish to denied. not warranted and should be mitigation present pun- information proceeded pronounce sen- any Iwhy ishment or reason know nothing tence. There stated was you shouldn’t now? sentence suggest court that would even that allocu- Yes, MR. Your Honor. KINNAIRD: required, tion there was no evi- was some present We’d like to evidence on his Harvey dence nor inference why behalf. We do not have reason forced to relate the details of abduction imposed sentence should not sentencing. Harvey and assault at his time. voluntarily. made these statements you Who do right. COURT: All want us as one of first This issue comes to speak? to have impression. considered whether We have Well, Harvey might analogous MR. Mr. Harvey’s KINNAIRD: statements poisonous to make subject himself would like a statement to the fruit doctrine, and then after Mr. tree v. United Wong Sun statement, completed has I have a 371 U.S. they were ob-

young lady by Cory name of Miss L.Ed.2d because *10 for a (Phonetic tained in a case later dismissed Wagonsen spelling) from Sheri- URBIGKIT, C.J., dissenting at 98. Had filed a speedy trial violation. 774 P.2d opinion. granted Harvey’s motion to the trial court trial, speedy no occa- dismiss for lack of a GOLDEN, J., dissenting opinion filed a for to allo- sion would have existed URBIGKIT, C.J., joined. any for cute. But the same be said URBIGKIT, Justice, dissenting. Chief right his to remain defendant who waives join in the dissent with Justice Golden testifies, silent, re- and the case is later preclusive on the mistake introduction of v. United Harrison appeal. versed on evidence, allocution and further dissent States, from the conviction this case and the (1968),. defendant singular rights and denial of constitutional previously testified to refute a statement procedural justice appellant for this ap- on made. The conviction was reversed high face of the emotion exhibited in the testimony re- peal. The defendant’s was community and the distasteful criminal of- subsequent resulted ceived in a trial which charged.1 fenses held appeal, in conviction. On abject justice This total failure in the testimony inadmissible it was because delivery system precludes any reasoned and, prior necessary to refute a statement jeopar- justification: constitutional double therefore, poisonous fruit of the tree. Har- disavowal, trial, dy speedy twice-violated was not vey’s allocution this case right impartial the denied to a fair and and prior a prompted by a desire to refute jury atmosphere of extreme within statement, suppress illegally obtained evi- Last, certainly community reaction. but dence, anything of a similar nature. or least, prosecutorial was allocution mis-

Harrison is of no stated, help. Simply he which, prior use of defendant’s statement right to remain silent and made waived although principal Wyo- a fundamental admissible, voluntary statement which is a law, ming relegated was to be a if trial for the same as he had testified at trap the defendant when exercised. for testimony purpose giving the sole favor- Any right appeal Wyoming as a statu- to himself. able opinion, tory my constitutional— —and mortgaged by procedural booby a Affirmed. events, (Evanston, Wyoming County, Wyoming principal participant in these to Uinta 1. The Swazo, guilty plea after four- Wyoming) David entered after which he was convicted of the incarceration, teen at which time he months conspiracy given He was a sen- two offenses. charged occurrence denied the events thirty years twenty tence of with credit for first-degree kidnapping the crimes of and sexual original charges before the time served on the a sentence of fifteen to assault. He received speedy trial reversal of conviction. petition twenty-five years incarceration. His Harvey, appellant, similarly Jetty was Lee judgment post-conviction vacate the relief to guilty alternately aiding either found grant a new trial based on the and sentence principal abetting rape kidnapping or as the comply failure to with W.RXr.P. 15 trial court’s (now acquittal to follow this in first trial with the 11) charges were oral- W.R.Cr.P. when the speedy court’s reversal for constitutional change hearing ly plea at the and based denied State, Harvey v. 774 P.2d 87 trial violation. denied on ineffectiveness of counsel was I). (Wyo.1989) (Harvey present proceed In the Any hearing by trial court. this court on his ing, following re-charge conspiracy on the 1989 petition post-conviction relief was also de- first-degree kidnap conspiracy to commit State, nied on a three-to-two vote. Swazo assault, acquitted on the sexual sexual he was C.J., Urbigkit, dissenting. (Wyo.1990), P.2d 1152 conspiracy charge and convicted on con assault guilty Phillips, W. after the first ver- Everett kidnapping spiracy commit the crime of aris kidnapping first-degree sexual as- dict of up ing night pick victim the late from discrepancy involved of whether he sault with Springs, He was street. from a Rock accessory principal, as an or as a was convicted years a term of twelve to fifteen sentenced to acquitted as a matter of law on the was for the time served on the first with credit Phil- constitutional violation decision in appellate court reversal. convictions before (Wyo.1989) (Phillips lips v. 774 P.2d 118 accessory, acquitted Consequently, con he is I). re-charged July 1989 with He was acting principal spiracy sexual kidnapping conspir- conspiracy to commit charge of the in and stands convicted first-degree rape. change assault acy A to commit kidnap. conspiracy County, granted choate from Sweetwater venue *11 Consequently, system’s trap. judicial Sec. 159. If the defendant has noth- ing say, protection to or after have a responsibility for constitutional he shall made statement, the court proceed pro- shall to ignored or is either denied. judgment as provided by nounce is law. principal in will address four issues 160. any person Sec. Whenever shall reverse order: convicted, otherwise, by be confession or any 1. state- Unconstitutional reuse any punishable offense in either whole following in re- provided ments allocution fine, part by person may or such move jury in the first trial versed adverse verdict to hear testimony mitigation the court guilt as evidence of in the second trial. sentence; duty it shall be the impar- testimony of the court to hear Non-production a fair and such may proper, such time as be suitable and jury. tial at the term of court the motion at which 3. Denied trial. made, may is or said court continue the 4. Prosecution in of the contravention term, to a future case on the same terms prohibition against constitutional double might the case have continued been jeopardy. confession; verdict or before and it shall duty prosecuting attorney proceedings attend to such to on the be- I. ALLOCUTION—AN INTRODUCTION territory, any half of the and to offer rule, any for the sake As classification necessary testimony give the court a to logi- of characterization factual or without understanding true of the case. definition adds to the under- cal little Id. standing principles. of basic constitutional 1992, Wyoming Supreme In March always I have considered allocution re-authenticated the to allocu- ingrained process within due constitutional by Wyoming tion continued inclusion in the concepts Wyoming under law when follow- Rules of Criminal Procedure: ing pervasive authority generally available (c) Sentence.— in comment 731 P.2d Chñsty v. * * (1) Imposition of Be- Sentence.—* (Wyo.1987) and find now no reason sentence, imposing court shall fore However, hardly it change from view. also: all matters at whether the characterization is constitutional or “just” statutorily cre- [*] # [*] [*] [*] [*] principle ated foundational (B) Afford counsel for the defendant law, allocution instilled stat- since opportunity speak behalf of an practice thirty state’s judicial ute defendant; statehood, Wyo. years before (C) personal- Address defendant 158-60, ch. has Terr.Gen.Laws §§ defendant ly and determine if the years essentially the for 123 continued to make a statement and wishes form, although by action same transformed mitigation present information superseded court from the statute of this the sentence. contemporary proce- to a rule of criminal attorney for shall have the state dure. speak to equivalent opportunity to Upon joint- that is the court. motion early Wyoming our territorial by the by the ly filed defendant provided process ancestors as a criminal state, the court attorney for requirement: a statement hear in camera such pro- 158. Before the sentence Sec. defendant, for the defen- counsel nounced, felony, the on the conviction dant, attorney for the state. the court shall be informed defendant 32(c). W.R.Cr.P. jury, and asked the verdict of the fundamental, de- say why ingrained, anything he has whether Allocution Wyo- fined, and, my pronounced perception judgment should not be Constitution, required process for due ming against him. *12 Const, bar, Rights. Wyo. frequently art. in within our Bill of “he addresses the conduct, aside, mitigation Cynicism among of his 10 and 11. §§ deprecate point- King a desires their intercession with the those who allocution as institution, mercy.” himself their or casts less ceremonial see Paul W. Barrett, Allocution, IX Mo.L.Rev. 115 Although perfectly it is clear that allo- compelling validity right of the originated cution as a device to raise person subject aof convicted to discretional legal might present issues that the rendi- sentencing acceptance re- use, to manifest judgment, tion of its modern un- disagreement sponsibility doubtedly by or factual direct- writings influenced ly right Chitty, opportuni- relates to both the constitutional has come to include an ty speak mitigation to the defendant to defend2 the rehabili- of sentence. In responsibilities Wyoming pe- tative of the Green v. United [365 (1961)] Note, system.3 nal Due Procedural Cf. 32(a), Court traced Federal Rule as it Sentencing at Felo- Process Judicial for read, right then to the common-law ny, 81 Harv.L.Rev. allocution. The noted that ear- Court as discussed the histori- Commentators have ly recognized England as 1689 it was cal roots of the allocution tenet: that the court’s failure to ask the defen- Allocution, sometimes called “the allo- anything say if he dant had to before cutus” is of such ancientness that it is imposed required sentence was reversal. difficult, impossible, if not to discover its important point The is that in Green law, origin. philology, historical as recognized significant changes address, especially allocution is an a for- right that have occurred since 1689—the mal, hortatory, authoritative address. cases, felony great to counsel in de- antiquity” “In Roman it was “a formal offenses, capital crease the defen- by general-in-chief impera- address a right testify dant’s to held that —but soldiers,” and, tor to his “In the Roman changes none of these lessened the need public Catholic Church” it is “a address present plea for the defendant to pope clergy to his or to the church mitigation. generally.” interesting insight gained One to be Barrett, supra, Paul W. IX Mo.L.Rev. at principles right from these two to —the (footnotes omitted). present right and the to make a state- right Tied to the defendant’s to be mitigation ment of sentence—is the present sentencing right at is the ancient early recognition and continued of an Everyone agrees of allocution. that allo- defendant, active role for the criminal cution is the formal address of the trial at the trial on the merits but judge to the defendant he as stands Indeed, guilt. after the determination of sentencing. the bar for In its earliest English as the outlines of criminal trial form, the allocution an effort procedure gradually shape, took we de- elicit information that would bar the steady enlargement tect a of the role of imposition per- of sentence. Thus it proceedings. today the accused in the If formed the mission of the more modern plea mercy quaint, sounds and if judgment protected by motion in or motion legal amply post- arrest cause is however, Chitty, motions, appeal, for a new trial. noted conviction and collateral attack, follow, nothing urge necessarily defendant has it does not if the Const, Wyo. pertinent impartial jury county art. 10 states in or district in § 2. alleged part: have been which the offense is committed. prosecutions the In all criminal accused right person shall have the to defend in Const, Wyo. aft. 15 states: § counsel, to demand the nature and cause accusation, thereof, copy Penal code to be humane. to have him, penal on the hu- code shall be framed be confronted with the witnesses principles preven- compulsory process of reformation and to have served for obtain- mane witnesses, ing and to a tion. suggested, noth- materiality have that there is some the distinction for this develop- ing worthy preservation found, if it appeal, arises not from concept denial, of allocution. might ment within when any but defendant uti- right inject prepackaged lize the to then Indeed, strategies of the primary one hinderance encumbrance on sentencing is to max- later to achieve rational rights appeal *13 with loss of a participation imize the of the defendant if retrial process. his counsel This re- self-incrimination occurs. and happened is what quires acceptance Appended of view that the That here. person merely analysis theory explicit of a and convicted crime is not is the function object upon, sentencing expects to be but is a found modern an acted special needs complex judicial individual whose consideration of defendant’s ac- and, quite possibly, special ceptance whose threat of responsibility. This is true others, well-being is not where, of sentencing guidelines with both up by The “guilty.” here, summed the word regarding as normal discretion concept of allocution within it contains sentencing indeterminate exists. either necessary objec- the seeds to achieve this regard, right fundamental individual’s of tive and this view the convicted. in sentencing to seek benefit via utilization allocution at the of time of the first convic- Cohen, Probation, Sentencing, Fred and becomes, perspective tion under the of this the Rehabilitative From Ideal: View majority, rights a waiver of constitutional Mempa Rhay, v. 47 Tex.L.Rev. 9-11 if a retrial should be obtained. (1968) (footnotes omitted). case, component right appeal third and as The constitutional This time on it signifi procedural of is discernible from the allocution involves substantive directly charged rights very cant number of decisions which of accused with a offense, this issue. The Su indeed a case address United States serious Court, preme through impression broadly series of more whole first efficacious cases,4 accepted specifically pervasive just appellant’s has never nor than this fu- rejected any that a to—if explicitly conclusion ture confinement a monument right component prostitution justice is contained failed de- constitutional actual of—a unquestioned obligation system. To livery apprehend majority within the decision, by per- provide opportunity realistically unsupported to exer trial court cise allocution for the convicted and soon- suasive case law and in contravention to responsive thoughtful dissent of to-be sentenced individual.5 Golden, necessary it Justice becomes provided has a continu- Since explication define the further status statutory 123-year procedural rule ous system jus- in the Wyoming allocution allocution, right any recognition of the logical about analysis tice for exercise appel- later trial time denial considered on being totally into authored a waiver provide not an- late review does and does rights separate and different constitutional question procéss in- definable swer the subsequent proceedings. significance whether the trial court mistake statutory only a its would violation of IT? IS A. ALLOCUTION—WHAT for an of a responsibility or actual denial case, comprehensive case on most allocu- protection. In either constitutional defining its and function wrong. tion character the trial court would be 183, 217, present requirement lawyer California, ering to be 91 for a 4. v. 402 U.S. McGautha 1454, 1472, (1971); Specht sentencing); United v. S.Ct. L.Ed.2d Patter at the time Behrens, S.Ct. son, 375 U.S. States v. 18 L.Ed.2d 326 386 U.S. States, (1963); Hill United L.Ed.2d 224 (1967) (requiring presence of counsel at a (1962); 82 S.Ct. 7 L.Ed.2d U.S. proceeding). commitment States, 301, 304, 81 United Green v. Ball 5 L.Ed.2d McGautha, See, e.g., 91 S.Ct. 5. 11 S.Ct. Rhay, Mempa L.Ed. 377 Cf. (consid Estelle, current review is Boardman v. for consideration of whether the error Cir.1992). this case harmless. (9th Following was F.2d 1523 a child guilty plea in the California sexual abuse Boardman, 957 F.2d at 1524. system, state court the defendant subject right by of waiver of the On requested right to address

Boardman counsel, retention the Boardman court part to answer in the court in allocution recognized: further made di- third-party victim communications argues California first that a defen- rectly right to the court. All of the ac- represented by dant who elects to be the court sentenc- cused to address before right speak counsel has no in his own denied, ing impact while victim com- The California courts behalf. have accepted. The munications were California view, adopted finding no appellate rejected appel- intermediate represented allocution for a defendant. *14 argument unpublished in an lant’s decision represented by “The [defendant] Supreme and the California Court affirmed and it was the function of that counsel opinion apparent accept- in without written counsel, rather than of the defendant process had not himself, ance that a due violation address to the court on the de- Cross, occurred as a result of the denial of allocu- People fendant’s behalf.” 678, 682, sentencing Cal.App.2d Cal.Rptr. tion under California law. (1963). Following rejection corpus in of habeas reject argument. We A defendant Court, the District the United States Court represented by to who chooses be coun- Appeals found constitutional error and right sel does not waive his to allocution. the reversed and remanded to represen- “That a defendant is entitled to District to determine if the States stages tation of counsel at all and, not, if then denial was not harmless to proceedings, including sentencing, does have the defendant returned to the state necessarily speak he ‘in not mean cannot re-sentencing. noteworthy court for It is mitigation pun- his own behalf’ ... that had no allocution statute or California States, Taylor ishment.” v. United significantly rule. This is different from (9th Cir.1960) (permitting F.2d Wyoming legal history the of statute and speak satisfy not counsel to does Rule rule, 32(c). now W.R.Cr.P. 32(a)’s requirement the defendant personally opportunity be offered the to tribunal, perceiving The federal a fed- speak). rep- A defendant’s choice to be eral constitutional interest involved the by complete counsel is not a resented allocution, state court denial of related in right surrender of his to direct his de- introduction: fense, permit does not a court forci- persuasive “The most counsel not bly interpose to that counsel between the speak be able to for a defendant as the person- defendant and the exercise of his might, halting eloquence, defendant rights. al speak for himself.” the administration of the crimi- “When Green v. United hedged by it is nal law ... about as 653, 655, 81 S.Ct. safeguards the Constitutional for the (Frankfurter, J., writing for the accused, deny protection of an to him plurality). exercise of his free choice the the Gary Boardman asserts he was denied right dispense to with some these process safeguards imprison due law because state ... is to a man speak privileges him to his and call it the Constitu- court refused allow sentencing hearing he tion.” his after affirma- requested agree

tively McCann, to do so. We States ex rel. Adams United requires process 269, 279-80, due criminal defendants 241- permitted quoted to allocute before sentenc- 87 L.Ed. 268 in Faret they request, California, if remand ing so we ta v. prosecutions, “In 45 L.Ed.2d all criminal the ac- enjoy cused provide right

The Sixth Amendment “does shall to a public trial, by an impartial jury; to merely that a defense shall be made for accused; informed of nature and cause of it grants accused accusation, to be confronted with personally right to make his de him, compulso- witnesses to have Faretta, 422 U.S. at fense.” process ry obtaining them in his fa- added) (emphasis (holding at 2533 vor, to have the counsel assistance of right defendant has of self- defense, his liberty and shall be at representation guaranteed the Sixth himself; speak for nor shall he be de- Amendment). right Because we find life, prived liberty, property, or unless sentencing to allocute at to have the judgment peers, of his law personal quality right same as the of the land.” defense, reject make a we California’s Brown, argument that Boardman abandoned 528 A.2d at 1105 n. 2. allocution when he retained Comparably, Wyoming Constitution counsel. “right uses common language the more person Boardman, defend counsel” in (emphasis 957 F.2d at 1527-28 stating: omitted).6 added and footnotes prosecutions In all criminal the ac- Equally persuasive is the Rhode Island the right cused shall have to defend in application *15 Court’s its own person by counsel, to demand the recognition constitution of the de- state in accusation, to nature and cause the in fendant’s constitutional interest v. State thereof, copy have a to be confronted Brown, (R.I.1987). citing 528 A.2d In 1098 him, with the witnesses to have provision

the Rhode Island constitutional compulsory process obtaining for served trial, right that court said: witnesses, by and to a trial right of allocution in this state is a impartial jury county or district in right of constitutional dimension. See is alleged which the offense to have been Const, I, art. A R.I. 10. defendant in a § committed. prosecution has the constitution- Const, 1, Wyo. practical 10. art. I see no § right al to address the court before the “to difference Rhode Island’s between pronounces justice sentence. State speak provision Wyo- for himself” Nicoletti, 613, (R.I.1984); v. 471 A.2d ming’s lan- “right person” to defend in v. 444 A.2d Leonardo guage. case, (R.I.1982). Brown, in this was speak opportunity afforded the before that since allocution had also conclude pronouncement of sentence. The vio- in statutorily specific existed detail for requires that this right adop- lation of twenty years more than before resentencing. Constitution, for remand case it is real- Wyoming tion of the ly rationally undeniable that allocution was For the reasons the de- above-stated in constitutionally design embedded is affirmed fendant’s conviction but provided by text Constitu- vacated, imposed is and the sentence provision. person” right tion’s “in to defend Superior is remanded to the Court case resentencing permit direction to with Boardman, As we are perceived was right of the defendant his constitutional and indi- by a look at the direct informed allocution. States rect determinations the United (footnote necessity of fur- Brown, Supreme A.2d at 1105 omit- Court nishing to be uni- ted). pro- right to allocution is The Rhode Island constitutional Const, I, eonstituen- vision, formly recognized, although its R.I. art. stated: § Coffey, required United v. circuit courts. States Whether allocution is also at re-sen- Cf. Cir.1989) (6th Turn- following probation, States v. tencing F.2d United revocation of in- er, (5th Cir.1984). also United only being practice, See the better is unre- 741 F.2d 696 stead of Cir.1976). Core, (7th States 532 F.2d 40 conflict in the federal v. solved within continued cy yet plea mitigation. as constitutional or not has not as court his The most persuasive specifically been determined. The necessi counsel not be able to speak for a ty recognized by of allocution first defendant as the defendant might, halting eloquence, speak United States Green himself. We are buttressed this con- States, 365 U.S. 81 S.Ct. clusion explicit- the fact that the Rule (1961).7 Surely 5 L.Ed.2d 670 no ly rights: affords the defendant two “to “[sentencing one would doubt behalf,” make a statement in his .own stage process.” critical of the criminal present any “to mitigation information in 128, 133-34, Mempa Rhay, punishment.” reject We therefore 254, 256-57, (1967). 19 L.Ed.2d 336 merely Government’s contention that af- Boardman, See also 957 F.2d at 1525 and fording opportu- defendant’s counsel the Lundien, 769 F.2d 981 United States nity speak fulfills the dual role of Rule (4th Cir.1985), cert. denied 32(a). 106 S.Ct. In addressing 32(a), F.R.Cr.P. Justice Frank Green was followed Hill v. United Green, furter stated in

S.Ct. at 655: inconsistently L.Ed.2d 417 which is erroneously majority but cited 32(a) design begin of Rule did not this case to establish a non-constitutional promulgation; legal prove-

with its its Hill, confirmation for allocution. nance was the common-law of allo- examination was not involved since the early recog- cution. As it was appellate concept case centered on the nized that the court’s failure to ask the speak. the accused had not asked to Left anything say defendant if he had be- open was the constitutional issue imposed required fore sentence was re- case of a request denied affirmative under Anonymous, versal. See 3 Mod. concepts: law Eng.Rep. (K.B.). Taken in federal It is to be noted that we are not deal- history, the context of its there can be *16 ing here with a case where the defendant little that doubt the drafters of Rule affirmatively was 32(a) opportunity denied an per- intended that the defendant be speak during hearing to at which his sonally the opportunity speak afforded to imposed. sug- sentence was it Nor is imposition before of sentence. We are gested in imposing that the sentence the not unmindful of the major relevant Judge District was either misinformed or changes that have evolved in criminal uninformed as to relevant circum- procedure since the seventeenth centu- Indeed, stances. there claim is no ry sharp decrease in the number of —the the defendant anything would have had punishable by death, crimes which were say if formally at all to he had been right of the testify defendant to on speak. invited to Whether 2255 relief § behalf, his right own and the to counsel. would be available if a violation of Rule why procedural But we see no reason 32(a) occurred in the context of other rule should be limited to the circum- aggravating question circumstances is stances under which it arose if reasons we therefore do not consider. right protects for the it remain. None of 429, at Id. 82 S.Ct. at 472. these modern innovations lessens the defendant, need for the personally, to Supreme The United States Court noted opportunity present have the to in footnote: “See Van Hook v. United States, 7. The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure were Hill v. United 368 U.S. 82 explicitly incorporate amended in 1966 to S.Ct. 7 L.Ed.2d 417 The amend- requirement: allocution provides opportunity ment also for counsel The amendment writes into the rule the speak to behalf the defendant. holding of the Court that the court (1991 Thus, ed.). F.R.Cr.P. at 108-09 rev. imposing op- before portunity sentence must afford an accomplished the 1966 federal rule amendment personally speak to the defendant to decisively Wyoming legislature what had States, in his own behalf. See Green v. United years enacted about 100 earlier in 1869. 365 81 S.Ct. States, long-standing 365 U.S. S.Ct. there was a basis for the [81 (1961)], right L.Ed.2d separate the relief afforded of allocution and indepen- in a dent appeal on direct case where sen- entitlement created by 32(a): tencing disregarded judge the mandate of F.R.Cr.P. Hill, 32(a).”

Rule 368 U.S. at 429 n. recently, Most explicitly the Court rec- S.Ct. at 472 n. Van Hook v. United ognized in it yet McGautha that had not 823, 823, confirmed the Constitutional basis for part: L.Ed.2d 821 stated in right of allocution: “This Court has directly determined whether or to petition for writ of certiorari what extent the concept process of due granted. judgment is reversed requires of law that a criminal defendant resentencing case remanded for wishing present argument evidence or compliance Rule 32 of the Federal presumably relevant issues in- Rules of Criminal Procedure. Green in sentencing permitted volved should States, U.S. 301 S.Ct. [81 so.” to do Id. at 218 n. [402 U.S.] 653]. at 1473 n. 22 (rejecting S.Ct. defendant’s The obvious modus vividendi for decision that he right claim was denied the litigative pathway by Hill was its guilt and penalty allocution because were corpus habeas chal- collateral conviction proceeding, determined in one and his lenge. The Hill then said: “We de- asking leniency statements in sen- cide collateral is not such relief tencing could be considered determin- available that is failure when all shown is a ing guilt). The assumed without comply requirements with the formal deciding that the Constitution does re- Hill, the Rule.” U.S. at quire permit that the trial court a defen- at 472. speak sentencing dant if he so Hill was followed United States 218-19, requests. Id. at 91 S.Ct. at Behrens, precisely 1472-73. It is this lingering again L.Ed.2d 224 where the court question today. that we decide must importance affirmed the of a Boardman, 957 F.2d at 1527. pro- defendant in a federal court criminal Courts federal circuits have sim ceeding speak allocution sen- before ilarly explicitly and rather found the consti tencing. held That court interest in even tutional allocution before court had committed reversible error Boardman written. United States modifying the defendant’s sentence (5th Moree, Cir.1991) 928 F.2d *17 law, right, absence. “This ancient in the is (footnotes omitted), court appellate rec 32(a) recognized by Federal Rule of the consistently ognized: have held that “[W]e Rules, requires Criminal court to which rights present a defendant’s and to be opportunity ‘afford an the defendant sentencing, at are of allocute consti make a statement his own behalf and to dimension, resentencing tutional extend present any mitigation information Jackson, v. proceedings.” United States ” punishment.’ at 297. Id. Cir.1991) (11th stated: 923 F.2d result, Harlan, concurring Justice present be “A defendant is entitled to when recognized is- possible “the constitutional imposed, Fed.R.Crim.P. his sentence is personal presence sues” involved 43(a); right present and this 2,n. opportunity for allocution. Id. at 168 based, speak constitutionally is 2. S.Ct. at 298 n. (5th Cir.1975).” Huff, 512 F.2d 66 States v. terms, explicit Carolina, the court in McGautha Ashe v. North also State See Cir.1978), (4th California, cert. denied 586 F.2d 334 (1971)again recognized that L.Ed.2d 1072 right ori- allocution was a of immemorial Converse consideration has been gin. decisions to be agree given with the author in other federal court would application and realistically within rule Boardman that McGautha defined justices v. Domin enforcement. United States stated a view of the decision (5th (1873), guez-Hernandez, Territory, Wyo. 934 F.2d 598 Cir. Kinsler v. 1991); Miller, appellant 849 F.2d raised the absence of United States record (4th Cir.1988); appeal grant v. Leav issue to establish either or United States (1st Cir.1973). itt, 478 F.2d 1101 denial of allocution as his issue in a death penalty Clearly, conviction. even for that Contrary designed negativism por- time, opinion writing was a model of review, trayed Paul journal in the staid W. brevity, clarity. opinion if The intro- Barrett, supra, IX Mo.L.Rev. state duction, discussion and decision are found course of courts have also had an extended stating: “Judgment in one sentence of the requiring right by of access the convicted affirmed, prisoner court district and the sentencing. individual to allocution before court, supreme resentenced in ac- constitution,8 right en- is derived from provisions cordance with of the statutes statute,9 applied acted rule or or common territory Wyoming.” of the Id. at 114. changing scope of case law law.10 increasing recognition provides which is It is somewhat difficult to determine referenced, currently updated provid- appar- found in the text which statutes are but Campbell, ently ed Arthur W. Law Sentenc- decisional statute is one for a 9:5, (2d 1991) (footnotes capital provides appellate case that ing, at 246 ed. § omitted), suspension court “shall order a of the exe- which addressed allocution and cution until such writ of error or other stated: law, process provided by shall be heard and split variously concerning Jurisdictions determined; upon hearing such writ of er- A the status of allocution. few tribunals ror, they prisoner shall order the to be have elevated it to the level of a constitu had, discharged, ap- a new trial to be or right, although tional others have de point day a certain for the execution of the A clined this invitation. number of sentence as the nature of the case regard part states it as of their common Wyo.Terr.Gen.Laws require.” 1869 ch. statute; Many provide law. for it § others, including system, the federal af rule.[11] byit ford later, thirty years The second case Kef Wyo. 73 P. 556 fer B. STATUS OF ALLOCUTION IN WY- similarly unpretentious equally non- CASE LAW OMING precedential Among many on this issue. issues, Unnecessary confusion seems to have other contention was made about majority opinion penalty been created as to denied allocution in the death con early Wyoming Supreme Having Court evaluation viction. first omitted allocution omission, efficacy constitutionality noting of its and then the trial long-standing require- required even then allocution court had the defendant Despite differing opinion ment. text and recalled and then informed the defendant verdict, comment, authority provided right no relevant afforded a to allocu tion, denying proceeded resentencing. then the two cases cited to this First, perspective. remedy some constitutional in This court noted the for omission *18 644, State, provide comprehensive analysis, 8. v. 235 Ga. 220 S.E.2d 922 11.To it is Brown (1975); Brown, 528 A.2d 1098. apparent also that some cases find a constitu- compared request tional difference in denied Vecchio, (Colo.App. People v. P.2d 9. 819 533 speak the lack of the court's invitation to when 174, 1991); People Emig, v. 177 Colo. 493 P.2d and related to the constitutional status accessi- States, (1972); Miler v. United 255 A.2d 497 368 Ashe, bility to collateral attack of allocution. 389, State, (D.C.App.1969); Kent v. 287 Md. 412 183, McGautha, See 402 U.S. 91 586 F.2d 334. 16, (1980); Knighton, A.2d 1236 Com. v. 490 Pa. Hill, 424, 468, S.Ct. 1454 and 82 S.Ct. Saari, (1980). 415 A.2d 9 State v. 152 Vt. Cf. Green, 301, compared S.Ct. 81 653. 510, A.2d 344 which held that 568 Boardman, F.2d See also 957 right statutory and not constitutional. is 129, Lyles, v. Md. A.2d 761 10. State 308 517 344, (1986); State, Harris v. 306 Md. 509 A.2d (1986). 120

1093 ming Supreme followed resen- was recall allocution Court decisions with which I predated tencing. remedy That what completely disagree 1903 and to which I have general remedy today law on angrily dissented.13 Here we have an exer- Camp allocution. Arthur W. denied See cise of a constitutional to then be 250, bell, supra, 9:5 at which states: § claimed to constitute waiver and forfei- judicial remedy neglect The for serious allocu- ture rather than a or failure of provides point of tion defects one nation- counsel act as the generally established uniformity. there is a wide Where sub- hitching post which case controls decisions right, violation the allocution stantial in the usual waiver/forfeiture of constitu- appellate remand for resentenc- tribunals right concepts tional vogue. now in current — ing proper procedures. under Where re- Nunnemaker, -, Ylst v. 111 ordered, usually mand is not it is because 2590, (1991). regarded the error is as insubstantial or non-prejudicial. II. OF WAIVER EFFECTIVE RIGHT TO Consequently, appellate there was no is- APPEAL AND VIOLATION OF already court had sue because PRIVILEGE AGAINST SELF-IN- provided remedy. appropriate See also BY CRIMINATION EXERCISED AL- Siciliano, 939, v. 953 States F.2d LOCUTION Cir.1992); (5th v. 953 Miler United comprehensive At as far as re- least (D.C.App.1969); Wright A.2d 498 255 revealed, presently search has this court is State, 24 A.2d Md.App. v. 486 presented impression case of total first State, 11 Md.App. and Brown v. regarding prosecutorial reuse of allocution 272 A.2d principal guilt statements for evidence of Whether allocution is constitutional as upon following retrial of an initial reversal otherwise, believe basic foundational conviction. anomalous nature Wyoming sentencing nature of allocution in first, highlighted case is status of its under both state and federal constitutional second, reversal for denied trial and present concepts hardly can doubt. being charged with the inchoate associative pervasive question then to decide pulled file belatedly offense out of the cabi- pollutes subsequent whether its exercise using ex- subsequent net and conviction proceedings to denial authenticate of other actly except facts the same the additive rights by applying concepts constitutional information. this eviden- allocution With Engberg Mey- of waiver forfeiture. v. tiary for sub- of allocution statements use er, (Wyo.1991), Urbigkit, P.2d conviction, the sequent in- prosecution C.J., dissenting concurring in part vidious and insidious caustic of constitu- State, part; P.2d Campbell v. is intro- rights tional waiver forfeiture J., Urbigkit, specially (Wyo.1989), concur- popu- law achieve a Wyoming duced into State, ring dissenting; v. Cutbirth result, although avoiding consecra- lar local J., (Wyo.1988), Urbigkit, P.2d * tion the basics dissenting. federal constitutions. ranges beyond the modern This case far appeal present? Factually, what does this personified by some appellate statements First, to two defen- speedy trial was denied criminal decisions of the United States Su- eighteen months approximately preme Wyo- of recent dants for Court12 and a course — -, opinion; 774 P.2d Thompson, Amin 12. Coleman J., Cutbirth, (1991); McCleskey dissenting; (Wyo.1989), Urbigkit, L.Ed.2d — Zant, U.S.-, Urbigkit, dissenting. L.Ed.2d To J. 751 P.2d at *19 (1991); Wainwright Sykes, C.J., Swazo, 517 S.Ct. Urbigkit, added 800 P.2d is (1977). 53 L.Ed.2d 594 present appeals dissenting. of These properly un- Phillips be understood cannot C.J., Urbigkit, Engberg, dis- 820 P.2d at 13. connexity appeals to the incar- of these less the concurring part; senting State, part Kallas v. plea guilty is also status of ceration and Swazo J., (Wyo.1989), Urbigkit, 776 P.2d reviewed. dissenting concurring specially in the result persuasion apply prosecutorial in order to defendant would need to then be advised (Swazo) alleged participant say something, on third that if he might elects to it he finally could not make until during who bond appeal might be used him or agreement testify out on to for pled inculpatory (properly become evidence de Considering constitutional state. court) fined the trial on retrial or if the something trial within the means charged sequentially individual should be support, jurist’s obey oath of office to arising with another offense out of the constitutions, defend the this court re- events, conspiracy. same like Miranda Harvey’s original versed conviction. How- Arizona, State 86 S.Ct. ever, Harvey, having because been convict- 1602, (1966).14 16 L.Ed.2d 694 See United trial, by jury right ed had exercised Edwards, F.Supp. States v. right allocution as a foundational (S.D.Ohio 1987)regarding the absence of prior to sentenc- rule/statute/constitution warning Miranda consideration that I, ing Harvey now faced with we are privilege there was a of the violation deciding prosecutorial propriety against both self-incrimination and the upon reuse the allocution statement re- by waiver of Johnson waiver constitutional conspiracy. rights Zerbst, by plea. Johnson v. having first The offense been reversed L.Ed. 1461 appeal, of the majesty state is em- (1938). See, however, United States change of the ployed the name offense Gotti, (E.D.N.Y.1986) F.Supp. kidnapping, aiding rape from or and abet- where, prosecution of the Gambino Fam ting rape pursue re-prosecution on the ily, warnings by plea of a not waiver were terminology facts identical under the this, all of considered. Out of it should However, conspiracy. sig- there this one recognized also be that this case involves change. nificant The statements made in the utilization allocution of the of the de occasion first for allocution the defen- judicial proceeding fendant himself prior to the of this dant reversal conviction statements of which then others become jury proceeding are now read into the regarding evidence of some character asso inculpation testimony princi- constitute ciative offenses with the defendant. See guilt. pal conspiratorial evidence of The Winley, (2d United States v. 638 F.2d 560 sophomoric makes majority an absurd Cir.1981), cert. denied 455 U.S. argument in of this in- absolution abusive which was right vasion constitutional of allocu- cited in. Gotti. justification tion based on the waiver course, voluntary. Of all allocution allo- prior guilty of a inadmissibility plea voluntary is and has cution been for the legally judicial- that has been withdrawn or years, last but a case of reuse in the ly provide principle invalidated should presented ap- fashion now case has applies here. Standen v. See appeal in parently never reached that same 101 Nev. 710 P.2d 718 Since period of time. created the forum for conviction which appellant re- allocution of this was equally logically Another but absurd con versed, princi- unanimous and unassailable approach sistent to accommodate the ma ples relating inadmissibility of law jority decision would case law or rule the “admission” should dictate the inadmis- change require give court to the trial sibility Standen, of this evidence. Miranda-type warning conjunction advice, charge required guilty plea to a of murder rule W.R.Cr.P. 32(c)(1)(C), Subsequent reversed. use in of allocution. The evidence might well also tell the accused vised about the non-resolvable constitutional di- faced, he waives those constitutional that —unless lemma with which he is heavier sentence rights speak failure to in behalf of himself sentencing lacking culpa mia attitude at —his weighed could in the determination of severi- criteria) (acceptance responsibility jeopar- punishment sentencing ty of in the initial deci- dized retrial if a reversal occurs. Similarly, might he as well also be ad- sion. *20 prior guilty plea was determined Evidence, Federal Rules Excepting Nevada to be erroneous: From Hearsay Rule Prior Inconsistent Trial, Statement judge The Given “At a jury advised the they Hearing, or Proceeding”, on all the evi- Other should base their decision 37 A.L.R.Fed. 855 dence in (1978); the case and guilty plea that the of cross-examination part was a of that evidence. This was if the accused voluntarily testifies. United prior error. A guilty plea that has been Johnson, States v. (1st 488 F.2d 1206 Cir. legally judicially withdrawn or invalidat- 1973). ed is deemed never to have existed and The State’s citation of a case involving should not be used as evidence. See exercise of the privilege against self-incrim States, Kercheval v. United 274 U.S. ination in a second proceeding having not 220, 224, 47 S.Ct. 71 L.Ed. 1009 been prior waived testimony in a differ (1927). ent similarly case is unpersuasive and non- Standen, 710 P.2d at 720. People See also Fortin, United States v. definitive here. Belleci, v. 879, 503, 24 Cal.3d Cal.Rptr. (11th Cir.1982). 685 F.2d 1297 Similarly, (1979) (where 598 P.2d suppressed evi cases unrepresented where an plea is not dence was subsequently used for sentenc later provide admissible at trial support no ing enhancement on a guilty plea for anoth for this court’s decision. Arsenault v. offense; er reversal and remand of the Mass., Com. 5, 35, 393 U.S. 89 S.Ct. sentence consequently required). A (1968); L.Ed.2d 5 White v. State Mary withdrawn notice of impeach alibi used to land, 1050, 10 373 U.S. 83 S.Ct. L.Ed.2d the defendant required likewise reversal of (1963); Snell, State v. 177 Neb. the conviction on the basis of error in ad (1964). 128 N.W.2d 823 ap has State, mission v. of the evidence in Jackson plied the same reasoning and result to tes (Okl.Cr.1991). 808 P.2d 700 See also Ster timony inquest at a coroner’s where proper State, ling v. (Okl.Cr.1973). 514 P.2d 401 warning given was not to the witness. The rule regarding convictions, reversed Maki v. Wyo. 112 P. 334 pleas, withdrawn and discontinued alibi de (1911). fenses is identical to the statements made The conjunction plea appertains same result negotiations if a defen- v. Trujillo, State fail. dant unrepresented 93 N.M. and unwarned when (1980). People See also P.2d 232 v. Rosen submitting pretrial psychological to a ex- thal, (Colo.1980) 617 P.2d Smith, (psychiatric Estelle v. amination. examination communications state (1981). 101 S.Ct. 68 L.Ed.2d 359 courts). true principle unrepre- and certain that an is not admissible plea during sented a sub- Authorities cited in appel State sequent hardly proves trial the exer- briefing logical late lack pro relevance for cise principle of the foundational of allocu- priety to reuse testimony. allocution tion renders its substance later admissible State’s cited cases included first trial testi at a following re-trial reversal and remand. mony when the defendant elects not Likewise, the prop- fact that a defendant’s trial, testify at a second Edmonds v. Unit erly represented States, testimony and advised at a ed (D.C.Cir.1959), 273 F.2d 108 cert. preliminary hearing is later denied usable at the (1960); particularly newsworthy itself is not Ayres v. United L.Ed.2d 1012 nor (5th anything does it have do Cir.1952); with the People 193 F.2d 739 Carlson, Williams, State v. appeal. issues in this (Colo.App.1983), 677 P.2d 390 Accord (Colo.1986); 115 N.H. 343 A.2d 29 712 P.2d 1018 use of aff'd Downer, People voluntary grand jury testimony trial, 192 Colo. 557 P.2d Licavoli, regard States testimony before a F.2d 613 (9th Cir.1979), Also, cert. denied grand jury. persuasive authority no provided in a case John when a conviction is Annotation, What Is “Other Gillespie, F. reversed after the defendant was errone- 801(d)(1)(A) Proceeding” Rule Under ously testify forced to because of the im- *21 1096 cases, Sun,

proper Wong of his confession. two 371 introduction See U.S. States, Harrison, U.S. S.Ct. 407 and Harrison United 2008, although 88 S.Ct. 20 L.Ed.2d S.Ct. third case which countervailing testimony provides authority in is distin- where re-introduction constitutionally guished. States, permit- first trial was not Simmons ted in the retrial. 19 L.Ed.2d 1247 (1968). Having cases considered the cited brief, Sun, Wong authorship then consider the case under the of Jus-

State’s will Brennan, by opinion. Actually, developed recitation this court’s tice the fruits of the poisonous application neither the State in its brief nor now the tree exclusion as an majority single invalidity original in cite one case started decision with evi- dentiary assessing rights against acquisition waiver of self-in- which then is extended by right consequently acquired crimination exercised allocu- to evidence or cre- single theoretically one case! ated. It illogical tion—not is to define understanding illegal this about what is precisely nothing This case has to do polluting product its to then conclude that poisonous justi- with fruits of the tree as a (ex- is justly provided protection what as a majority Wong fication for the decision. ercising right make an allocution 371 U.S. Sun v. United statement) any succeeding denies constitu- Nor it S.Ct. L.Ed.2d does Obviously, rights. tional has Wong Sun anything testimony have to do with in a absolutely nothing to do waiver or with right trial and remain upon first silent right against forfeiture self-incrimi- trial, Harrison, second nation derived from the of allocu- exercise clearly rejects the present tion. instead, and, majority decision is consistent principle constitutional which real- falls no closer line of Harrison to a base istically should applied precedential to reverse the claimed relevance. that presented case, majority opinion. Wong Sun, reuse thesis in which followed fruits of rationale, tree, Applying majority’s poisonous it is feas- it was that determined say way in a generic ible to that when the when confessions coerced were admitted defend, causing accused elects to the court could as into evidence accused to then easily say that he later rights rights against waives to waive self-incrimination guilt trial. testifying repetition, have determined at this in such testi- Waiver coerced broadly portrayed only mony given would mean that at the first trial inad- was then right the exercise one fundamental se- missible in a second trial. If Harrison requires although all other quentially equally anything, ap- that means cited in rights pellate that, thereafter it briefing, fundamental are lost and is like the re- Fortunately, pressed testimony, illegal forfeited. even 1992 in the first trial con- presented, produce constitutional environment now viction cannot evidence admissible support which, broad-reaching upon actuality, no case to this at- retrial concepts pro- present provided appeal. tack on basic constitutional status in this majority opinion. strange precedent vided State or the is indeed a Harrison principal decision. authenticate this The status allocution fabric elements in decision its should constitution- already law adequately has been ally require appeal. reversal discussed this dissent re- validate unquestionable recognition law quired and Since this is the substantive case system opinion, right majority is fundamental in our and cited look fur- we years. something fashion for ther to analo- has continued find even gy justify affirming possibly We need to look at each case cited in the could allocu- upon majority opinion admissibility what tion status reversal and to assess structure writer unusual is con- of constitutional law the of that retrial. A most statement opinion Actually majority opinion including seeks create. directed tained in the subject by opinion Washington, majority are citation to United States v. future self-incrimination *22 (1977)which bears examination. It is said: is, actuality, the uninformed and

A essentially defendant’s statements involuntary be admis- advance abandon- against sible him in proceedings, further ment of right his future to defend.15 provided they voluntary. However, are What this court now tells defense coun- if require the trial court were to a defen- general sel in particular defendants in dant to confess to criminal activities in within the Wyoming state courts is that: his allocution in return for a more lenient In exercising right, this fundamental please sentence, those statements would recognize the your right diminution of to “genuine compulsion amount to of testi- appeal you and that probably will be fore- mony” in right against violation of the closed a fair trial and an opportunity to self-incrimination. Washington, if defend a reversal should actually be 1818; U.S. at 97 S.Ct. at achieved; consequently, only way to Rodriguez, States v. 498 F.2d protect your right to defend on retrial (5th Cir.1974). would be to right surrender the to allocu- Maj. op. at 1083. tion in the first proceeding. practical Overtly, only possible purposes for effect, any this court tells convicted individ- deny (which allocution are either guilt to ual that he should not exercise the funda- will seldom serve to severity diminish the right mental of allocution if the actual va- sentence) (nor- or to seek leniency lidity original questionable. conviction is mally by responsibility seeking assessed Legal malpractice and ineffectiveness of ,retributional assessment). moderation in counsel considerations appropriately are Reuse of allocution at a later trial would magnified multiplied. only pursued prosecution if some Here, six-year within this course of liti- inculpatory extrapolated content can be gation, this result means acci- re-prosecutorial serve purposes. dentally and any opportunity without Another two majority sentences anticipate followed, the result which sur- opinion deserve similar questions content right protest rendered his actual denial “However, logic. exercising right about and, of a failure of trial to allocution does require surrendering not anticipate counsel to what this court has right one preserve another. The convict- result, accepted now done in the conse- party ed only needs to decide whether the quence of his first price conviction as the right to remain silent will be asserted or for exercising constitutionally con- Maj. op. waived.” at 1082. What statutorily provided right cerned and says simply practical court does not make Today, allocution. in Wyoming, allocution sense. How these two sentences can be trap attorney is a for the uninformed approve applied asserted to waiver of the unwise if accused. Minimal not non- against retrial, self-incrimination for includ- gam- existent benefit remains because ing pollution appeal opportunity by of an irritating judge by contending ble evidentiary exercising commitment when explaining innocence or the commitment in allocution, any defies rational under- regret price is a much heavier than stated, standing. As earlier we understand potential benefit to be achieved. this court’s thesis to establish that if the law, justify accused elects to exercise allocution as a To status in case right, opinion fundamental he will majority surrender a added to the fruits of the 15. The most pernicious sentencing guidelines. mutation of a similar tion See United ideology Acosta-Cazares, (6th Cir.), sentencing guide is found in federal States v. 878 F.2d 945 pleads line sentence enhancement if the accused cert. denied 110 S.Ct. 493 U.S. testify. compared innocent and elects to then If the sen L.Ed.2d 204 with the more justice, Dunnigan, tence is enhanced for obstruction of "the current case of United States v. — jury (4th Cir.1991), you” years granted did not believe becomes added F.2d 178 cert. -, in sentence. This "do not rock the boat with defending" mentality 112 S.Ct. L.Ed.2d significant Rodriguez, has achieved See also United States v. (11th 959 F.2d 193 1992). authority in the federal courts with mesmeriza Cir. added, not further on an issue Wong Sun

poisonous tree cases of Simmons, appeal, com- Harrison, disregard that with the presented self-incrimination, warning against dis plete which will be hereafter, testimony subsequent voluntary and then could cussed detail application: cases further to use the defendant at four other available Arkansas, Rock v. actual trial. (1987); Washington, L.Ed.2d 37 authority unpersuasive array This 1814; Powers justify waiver from exercise of does *23 32 S.Ct. by right of honored fundamental allocution States v. L.Ed. 448 and United convention, constitutional legislation, (5th Cir.1974). Rodriguez, F.2d 302 adoption by this in rule acceptance implausible is con The latter case the most against privilege self-incrimination that contemporary sen sidering the existence of retrial conviction upon lost after first system. tencing guidelines in the federal for fundamental mistakes reversal Jopson, L. G. Shein Jana Marcia & Cf. Although colloquy has this prosecution. 2A, Manual, App. Pt. Sentencing Defense happened never in a suf- apparently before E, Rodriguez, In abusive at 227 appellate way to create an issue for ficient by judge the trial to force admis conduct review, beyond rea- something there is still sentencing guilt as a function of sion of controlling prin- logic to be found in soned sufficiently appellate deci criticized Although I ciples of constitutional law. did require resentencing. The case sion Golden, analysis agree with the of Justice question allocu of reuse of not involve significance further because of the venture rather, tion; it was abusive violation comparably the issue and the involved sen rights Fifth Amendment as a initial validity Rules of realistic tencing price bargained justice. recently adopted Procedure Criminal Powers, estab- 223 U.S. 32 S.Ct. 281 rights requirements for providing the ac- well-accepted fact that lished delivery justice. subjects testify elects to at trial cused who unpersua- case significant The which was trial. at that himself cross-examination distinguished majority opinion sively Rock, as is well 107 S.Ct. Simmons, 967. 88 S.Ct. known, defen- addresses the issue testimo- The was whether Simmons testify subjected to whether or not dant suppression in a ny pretrial the accused of Four- hypnotic rehearsal as a condition hearing would admissible at motion become of due Amendment effectuation teenth Supreme Court The United States trial. some- The case to have process. closest “is testimony of the accused held that the thing marginally to allocu- even relevant part of his regarded integral as an to be upon Washington, reuse retrial is tion Id. Amendment exclusion claim.” Fourth de- Washington 97 S.Ct. States 88 S.Ct. at 975. The United at grand “target” in a termined that witness recognized: then Supreme Court voluntarily who testified

jury session by the rule laid the courts Under down privilege of his Fifth Amendment waiver below, give testimony only could he not warrant against self-incrimination did testimony assuming the risk that the The ac- subsequent indictment. quashing a him at against later be admitted would in the session cused had been warned kind, links Testimony of which trial. might he said used anything to evidence which a defendant held that Washington, In the court him. enough important considers Government grand jury applied to the Fifth Amendment at admitted and to seek to have to seize sessions, preclude that it volun- but did trial, highly prejudicial often be must properly tary self-incrimination when a defendant. neither “[Tjarget status witness warned. Id. the constitutional enlarges nor diminishes then Supreme Court The United States against compelled self-incrimina- protection analysis and by extended at 1820. established tion.” Id. identically accepts fits with exercise of court now in this fashion that decision are the if forego rights allocution to a successive same ideas advanced in dissent Justice retrial occurs: Black within that opinion. 1968 Simmons Only justice joined one other adopted by rule the courts Black’s below single dissent and I merely impose upon

does not a defendant have not found a case may him reported adopted a condition which deter from which has since been asserting objec- a Fourth Amendment position. that doctrinal imposes tion—it a condition of a kind to suppression hearing addition to the always pecu- which this Court has been preclusion firmly now fixed Simmons liarly sensitive. For a defendant who unqualified principle as an in American standing wishes to establish must do so law, compara- there are a number other at the risk that the words which he ut- concepts, ble none of are which addressed ters later be used to incriminate decision, majority support denial him. Those courts which have allowed admissibility of the allocution state- testimony given the admission of to es- following ments reversal and a follow-on *24 standing have reasoned that tablish there (whether proceeding a retrial in the normal is no violation of Fifth Amendment’s case, here, or, conspiracy interject- where is Self-Incrimination Clause because the jeopardy). ed to avoid double testimony voluntary. As an ab- Smith, 451 U.S. 1866 au- matter, may stract this well true. A thors the well-defined rule that no eviden- “compelled” testify in defendant tiary waiver by results from what is said support suppress only of a motion to during competency the defendant a exami- testify- the sense that if he refrains from Fortin, nation. also 685 F.2d 1297 and See benefit, ing forgo he will have to a Edmonds, 273 F.2d which determined testimony always involuntary is not as a examination, that in a commitment the doc- simply given matter of law it is because subsequently testify tor could not to state- However, a obtain benefit. as- by ments made to him the accused. Cf. sumption reasoning which underlies this Texas, Powell v. 492 U.S. 109 S.Ct. is that the defendant has a choice: he (1989) (which L.Ed.2d com- testify give up refuse to parably Sixth Amendment non-no- involve assumption applied benefit. When tice to counsel defects in the commitment to a situation in which the to be “benefit” Texas, process) and 486 U.S. Satterwhite gained by provi- is that afforded another (1988). 108 S.Ct. Rights, sion of the Bill of an undeniable Thus, providing tension is created. in this case There is additional case law a obliged give up either to preclusion testimony Garrett was at a later to reuse believed, counsel, by what he with advice of stage when the initial statement is made to be a valid Fourth Amendment claim jeopardy the defendant to resolve double or, effect, legal his Fifth issues, Bounos, waive 693 F.2d United States v. privilege against Amendment self-incrim- (7th Cir.1982), by and statements made circumstances, ination. In these we Williams, hearing. defendant at bail it intolerable that one constitu- Note, A.2d Administration 29. See also find right tional should have to be surren- A Release and Detention: Pro- Pretrial dered in order to assert another. We 83 Yale L.J. posal Unification, therefore hold that when a defendant also, (1973). Clearly 153-55 statements sup- support testifies in of a motion to made in connection and communications Fourth Amendment press evidence on plea bargaining are not thereafter ad- testimony may grounds, not there- against interests for as evidence missible against him after admitted at trial on Tinio, S. Annota- prosecution. Ferdinand guilt the issue of unless he makes no tion, Admissibility Communi- of Defense * objection. with Plea cations Made in Connection 393-94, 59 A.L.R.3d (emphasis Bargaining, at at 88 S.Ct. Id. 11(e)(6)). (now 15(e)(6) omitted). W.R.Cr.P. footnotes What this W.R.Cr.P. added and petitioner here that this rule more than There is insistence established Mau, right. this constitutional waived sixty years ago Wyo. State find. It has District Court did so (1930). context, In civil see 285 P. 992 pointed indulge out that “courts been Mentock, P.2d also Mentock v. every presumption reasonable Allen, Coulter, (Wyo.1981); Inc. v. waiver” of fundamental constitutional (Wyo.1981); P.2d 1199 United States presume rights and that we “do not ac- (3rd Cir.1989); DiLoreto, 888 F.2d 996 quiescence in the loss of fundamental Fox, 46, 760 P.2d 670 State v. 70 Haw. rights.” ordinarily A waiver is an inten- relinquishment tional or abandonment of Harrison, right privilege. The determi- a known precluded testimony reuse an in- nation of whether there has been improper- trial and resulted from an second telligent waiver of the to counsel ly during confession the first tri- admitted case, depend, upon par- must each al, defining present is consistent facts and circumstances surround- ticular Despite structure of American law. case, ing including background, rights on-going diminution of constitutional experience, and conduct of the accused. the current United States self-incrimination, regard With see also Court, precedent just- course of continued 367, 377, Rogers v. United ifies the conclusion that neither this nation 95 L.Ed. 344 nor this state exists a constitution J., Black, involving A dissenting. case guarantee reliance one necessar- where arraignment plea waiver the ab- *25 ily relinquishment results in of all other provided judicial sence of counsel a similar protections.16 constitutional basic rejection of waiver of the constitutional Philosophically, (prior this court States, right, v. 128 F.2d 265 Wood United present majority opinion) gener- and courts (D.C.Cir.1942), recog- it was also where ally have been reluctant to infer a waiver nized that the defendant was entitled to privilege. of a constitutional Michael A. proceedings. at the A com- have counsel DiSabatino, Annotation, Right Witness particularly ment of the court was notewor- Privilege in Federal Court to Claim “impairment thy regarding of the court’s Against Giving integrity. Admitting plea array would After Self-Incrimination Evidence on Same Matter or in Sworn prosecution’s on the side trial [the court] 793, 42 Proceedings, A.L.R.Fed. 795 agency procuring Other as well as for (1979),citing example as an States admitting evidence.” Id. at 274. (N.D.Cal.1951). F.Supp. Steffen, v. 103 415 peculiar Within the status of this case principle For illustration of this basic of where the fiction of a different offense is law, constitutional see Smith v. United preclusion of created to avoid the double 69 93 L.Ed. 337 U.S. S.Ct. jeopardy, yet objection there is another grant immunity 1264 where a subsequent allocution statement reuse a concept was considered. The was identical- trial. This is derived from the direction of recognized of a to a ly non-waiver majority that this is a case on different Johnson, jury trial in 304 U.S. at concept de- Consequently, trial. reuse 1023; Kennedy, at Aetna Ins. Co. v. proceeding, e.g., grand S.Ct. rived from the same 389, 393, Bogash, 301 U.S. hearing, to Use or retrial jury, preliminary with 809, 811, reversal, L.Ed. 1177 application to this has no technical Easton, 16 Hodges conceptualized v. Otto now to consist case where (1882) sentencing 27 L.Ed. 169 as a in one of a statement made at Johnson, consequently In at admissible right to counsel. offense to become See, (footnotes omitted), for trial of another offense. 58 S.Ct. at 1023 evidence Holm, Wyo. P.2d e.g., Justice Black stated: State State, (Wyo.1992) exception by guilty P.2d 204 possible is the waiver Davila v. 16. The State, majority (Wyo.1992). plea of this which both the P.2d 231 Robinson v. in dissent addressed in detail this writer

HOI (1950). impeachment. This was not from the federal justice obstruction Compare Mintle, statute, Mintle v. 764 P.2d 255 18 U.S.C. 1503. The federal § McComb, (Wyo.1988)with Wyo. State v. statute has interpreted quite been broad- (1925) Crago 239 P. 526 See, ly. e.g., Jeter, United States v. Wyo. (1922). 202 P. 1099 (6th Cir.1985); F.2d 670 United States v. Vesich, (5th Cir.1984). 724 F.2d 451 isIt proceedings

As result of a series of not incumbent on respondent to misconduct, demon- involving judicial the Vermont prosecuted strate that she will Hill, in In re Court 149 Vt. question the answer 545 A.2d 1019 will result in was faced with a comparable case, decision. her conviction. The United States Su- required preme court was determine whether a has described the standard judge required testify could be as follows: proceeding disciplinary testimony if the privilege “The afforded not ex- might prosecu- create unfavorable criminal tends to answers that would them- tion evidence. The court found support a selves conviction under a ... judge’s prior testimony still-pending in a criminal statute but likewise embraces proceeding criminal did not create a waiver those which would furnish a link in the right against of her self-incrimination in prosecute chain evidence needed to another forum. for a claimant ... crime. But this agree respondent We with that her protection must be confined to instanc- privilege respect to her false swear- es where the witness has reasonable ing Despite jury case remains alive. apprehend danger cause to from a di- her, verdict the Fifth Amend- rect answer. The not witness is exon- privilege ment is available until the case answering merely erated from because concluded, fully including any appeals. doing he declares that in he so would Gretzler, See State 126 Ariz. say-so incriminate himself—his does 612 P.2d Nor does the itself establish the hazard of fact that she testified her *26 It for incrimination. is the court to right of constitute waiver her to assert say justified whether his silence is privilege here, the in another the forum— require clearly to him to answer if ‘it Judicial Conduct Board. See United appears to the court that he is mistak- Yurasovich, States v. 580 F.2d However, witness, upon en.’ if the (3d Cir.1978). Further, 1220 we are not interposing claim, required were to persuaded representations that the of prove the hazard in the sense which willingness testify, her counsel to her usually required a claim is to be estab- Court, made in this constitute a waiver. court, compelled lished in he would be recognize possi- While we that it be protection the very to surrender which expressly, privilege ble to waive the privilege designed guarantee. is by impliedly, agreement, waiver privilege, To sustain the it need be important right an constitutional such implications evident from must be clear and intentional and cannot question, setting in the it is which lightly inferred. See be Smith v. United asked, responsive that a answer to the States, S.Ct. question explanation why or an it L.Ed. Johnson v. might danger- cannot be be answered Zerbst, 458, 464, injurious could ous because disclosure 82 L.Ed. 1461 We have appraising judge result. The trial reviewed the record and do not believe governed claim ‘must as much of respondent’s that the statements coun- personal perception pecu- by his sel meet this standard. as liarities of the case facts Respondent has demonstrated a risk of ” actually in evidence.’ prosecution further under 13 V.S.A. justice v. United our obstruction statute. § Hoffman 486-87, L.Ed. 1118 That statute is taken almost verbatim (1951) (citations omitted). protection As the wisdom and con- Board rational its case, correctly least stitution, well-supported ruled at some provided a stan- special that in- questions counsel general dard In res- of constitutional law. privilege tended would offend the self-incrimination, to ask olution of see also State But, under the standard. we Linscott, (Me.1987) A.2d Hoffman “ today precisely ques- need not rule Licavoli, 623): (quoting 604 F.2d at ‘[A] privi- tions fall and answers within privilege waiver the Fifth Amendment lege and scope of the nature because particular proceeding limited to the ” announcing. are remedy we Licavoli, which the waiver In occurs.’ developed. Hill, A.2d at 1022-23. converse situation The wit- In re favorably ness had testified the defen- justified The enforced testimo- court then grand jury proceeding dant in the and then ny discipline hearing providing at the subpoe- elected “to take the Fifth” when immunity” “use and future fruits testify naed by defendant to trial. The recognized proceeding. The court criminal recognized: court there required judge could not be testify proceedings disciplinary and risk It is settled a waiver of Fifth prosecution. self-incrimination for criminal privilege Amendment is limited to the case, Begins, The underlying State particular proceeding in which the waiver * * * (1986), involved Vt. 514 A.2d 719 both Consequently, voluntary occurs. prosecution probation pending testimony grand jury before a does not The revocation for the same event. issue privilege waive the self-incrimi- right developed of the defendant nation at trial. testify probation revocation hear- Licavoli, F.2d The at 623. unavailable convicting ing himself tes- without (non-party) opportunity witness under the timony might in a criminal case which fol- hearsay exception permitted grand then The elected enforce low. constitu- jury testimony to read at The trial. provided options tional for the accused and justification no provides case basis for subsequent prosecution immunity from admissibility. testimony allocution required if to exercise one constitutional principle The non-reuse after a double probation in a right prior revocation. jeopardy challenge hearing recognized ear- systematology, are most those cases sim- Bounos, lier with reference to 693 F.2d 38 question ilar to the allocution broader provides comparable authority. also presented here. same answer obvi- empirically principle applied in stated Bou- required ously for fair and reasoned consti- jeopardy nos to double and here to allocu- protection; tutional allocution testi- *27 persuasive totally controlling tion is mony thereafter introduced as cannot be precedent concept: and constitutional in the evidence for criminal conviction iden- tically postured may put A associated offense con- criminal defendant not be spiracy. giving up to the choice his Fifth between right him- Amendment not to incriminate concept particularly This is valid since giving up self some other constitu- acquired the fruits of the allocution was as States, right. tional Simmons v. United speedy first conviction invalid when 967, 976, 390 19 U.S. Harrison, denied, 88 was Frazen, 1247 v. L.Ed.2d Wade any evidentiary reuse was S.Ct. (7th Cir.1982). if 678 F.2d 57 Hence contrary directly preclusion to- the there the testified to their con- defendants had provided. “testimony” have We spiratorial May 1979 activities between product very poisoned found to be a of a 1980 to April in order establish by the tree infected disease denied jeopardy the clause claim under double speedy If the trial dismissal trial. Amendment, they not of the Fifth would constitutionally required had occurred right thereby have their surrendered Harrison, for no occasion allocution (also Amendment) not to under the Fifth in this case. The would have been created Hill, testimony greater give that could be used direct- Supreme Court in Vermont ly indirectly to of those proof convict them correlative for burden assessed against government: unlawful activities. v. the United States In mon, (3d Cir.1977); 568 F.2d might The defendant make the neces- Stricklin, 591 United States F.2d sary prima facie showing nonfrivolous (5th Cir.1979). The district jeopardy by double reference in- dictments, offering was as supplemented therefore correct in by a bill particulars ordered, if appropriate that the not hold defendants would material, waiving other record rights their Fifth if alone. He Amendment might it necessary find to offer they guilt purpose confessed his own pretrial testimony at hearing. If the making out jeopardy their double claim. followed, latter course the defendant Bounos, 693 F.2d at 39. thereby will not privilege waive the denying right judicial In a further against self-incrimination and his testi- immunity, the court said: mony not subsequently be used force, Fifth Amendment of own its against at him the trial on the merits. judicial the superaddition without aof States, Simmons v. United order, immunity prevented would have S.Ct. L.Ed.2d 1247 government using from defen- Supreme held that Court a defendant jeopardy dants’ statements in a double may testify pretrial in a suppression hearing, or developed leads from those hearing directed at vindication of Fourth statements, pros- subsequent mount a rights Amendment without fear that against ecution them. testimony be used will him at Franzen, 678 F.2d at 57. where zen, Id. at 40.17 involved sel tiveness would no conceivable This was tributed treated refused facts The same validity 967, 973-76, afraid alleged forced to incriminate himself. not have been. F.2d 56 as a totally movant attest to the *28 to his action. plain counsel case of principle applied comply * voluntariness of that attestation would be waiver of Wade’s of which is error on the tactical motive can be at- unprepared defense coun (7th Cir.1982). the motion. The with a local court See Simmons Wade lawyer’s unchallenged, truth 389-94, confession right Franzen v. Fran ineffec lawyer part; rule, It See also United Inmon, ted. from a purpose the against self-incrimination to be inferred L.Ed.2d 79 denied 444 U.S. Amendment claims and would controlling that the that one constitutional 76]. In a bit defendants from dered in reasoned that hearing. subsequent guilt (4th. Cir.1988) It does [377] similar We 568 F.2d guilty involved or innocence reasoning (1979). order agree not waive context, trial. The 392-94, plea States v. to assert pretrial with the Inmon Court other rule would inhi- relates in Simmons is also 88 S.Ct. 967 (3rd Cir.1977), of the the waiver of asserting United States privilege against Ragins, determination right double another. 390 crime admit- be surren- jeopardy [at require Fourth cert. F.2d 975- Stricklin, 591 F.2d In States v. United self-incrimination at other times for other (5th Cir.), 1112, States, 444 U.S. McCarthy 1118 cert. denied v. 394 crimes. United (1979), 963, 449, 1166, 459, 100 S.Ct. 62 22 418 L.Ed.2d 375 U.S. 89 S.Ct. L.Ed.2d Johnson, recognized (1969); a dismis F.2d regard the to 488 1206. Further- court more, court jeopardy based on and as the Johnson said: sal motion double immunity. Kastigar recognized See v. United court in Bounos consider transactional 17. The the 441, 1653, unavailability States, of the difference between able testimony 92 S.Ct. 32 L.Ed.2d of for future affirmative evidence therein. 212 cited concepts prosecution and the broad of use and 1104 not, offense, any separate they privileges but should also de-

Constitutional event, parole except cooperate waived there is cline to with the officer in consequences investigative sentencing of the of the the for report awareness States, Brady waiver. v. United of See extent adverse information since 742, 748, [1468], 90 1463 25 agent 397 has now by U.S. been recreated this (1970); v. 747 private investigator L.Ed.2d Smith United court into for 150, States, 137, U.S. 69 S.Ct. 1000 337 prosecutor acquisition potential in the of (1949). [1007], L.Ed. 1264 93 testimony By for future criminal trials. thoughtless Harvey’s this to affirm drive Johnson, F.2d at 488 conviction, conspiracy relegates this inculpato- admissibility The test of for justified conduct of the convicted indi- requires ry statement evidence voluntari- responding during presentence vidual in in- compulsion adjures ness coercion or vestigation something and allocution to just majority opinion does which this for akin military provide direction Harrison, not passing grade. achieve a rank, only name, serial We number. 219, 2008; 392 88 S.Ct. v. U.S. Hoffman explicit do di- this contravention States, 71 S.Ct. United provided by rection numerous decisions of (1951); v. 95 L.Ed. 1118 Horn regard- the United States Wyo. 80, (1903). 73 P. 705 ing the Constitution of the United States yet major subject There another is abject disregard and in the due process of by majority predis in its unaddressed Wyo- of right to defend criteria position for to affirm conviction ming Constitution. very something. This is whether the close “ comes, too never so ‘Wisdom often ly allayed presentence information fur reject merely ought one not to it because it by nished individual convicted Similarly, one re comes late.’ should not probation presentence officer inves wisdom, ject piecemeal merely it because tigation report becomes an admission which hobbles toward truth with backward creates reuse evidence for a re admissible glances.” People v. the State prosecution trial or in another Wolf offense. Colorado, 25, 47, 69 S.Ct. v. See Baumann F.2d (1949), J., Rutledge, L.Ed. 1782 (9th Cir.1982); Jones, v. United States dissenting. See also Watts State (10th Cir.1981); People 640 F.2d 284 Indiana, 338 U.S. Cal.Rptr. Harrington, Cal.3d (1949): triumphs 93 L.Ed. 1801 “Law P.2d 961 cert. denied impulses when the natural aroused L.Ed.2d 662 yield shocking safeguards crime Alesi, People 64 Cal. Cal.2d which our has evolved civilization Jones, Rptr. 434 P.2d justice administration at once Appeals the Tenth Circuit Court of rea rational and effective.” although soned the Fifth Amendment protection sentencing does offer The decision this court countenance process, inquiry broad and information utilization of the allocution statements for presentence investiga gathering defined only misguided second trial evidence is not reports sentencing is for tion and case, badly disruptive but this “substantively.” to be used procedural Wyoming constitutional and law totally wrong. heritage. What we do is greatest present This decision inflicts the danger presentence to the defendant III. CHANGE OF VENUE investigative finding process and fact way compo- purposes included For of introduction and which allocution but an decision, compe- comparison, begin result of this section con- nent. As a *29 impartial only obligated sidering jury/change counsel are not of ven- tent defense Wyoming of recent Wyoming in to advise their clients not to ue element another Amin, when in rights allocution if it case. Kru tried exercise their Abdullah County holding hostage two might for a retrial or a Carbon create evidence

H05 penitentiary employees, absolutely defend; no right had art. of accused to § realizing impartial jury chance of a fair and and art. press. freedom of the § for his life sentence criminal trial. Amin Probably Hopkinson not even the State, (Wyo.1991), 811 P.2d Ur State, (Wyo.1990), 798 P.2d 1186 aff'd C.J., bigkit, time, dissenting. At the same — (10th Cir.), F.2d 609 cert. denied defense, really Amin had a minimal since -, hostage-taking hardly dispute some was (and progeny subsequent litiga case its presented (although on the record what did tion) nor of the other criminal cases happen subject has since become to some conviction, Horn, since the Tom Horn P. question). maybe, So for this court in 705, years ago, some 90 have created the gloss over the Amin constitutional di totality publicity found in Sweetwater Const, Wyo. rection of art. 10 of “an § County unrelenting publicity in 1989. This impartial jury” could be resolved in a “so rehearing by did not end with the denied conceptualization what?” of the constitu Wyoming Supreme Court, but contin However, right. tional there was not one- ued into by re-arrest and then to trial date hostile, angry, publici tenth of the reactive filing of a civil suit. No criticism of inty by Amin’s case as was characterized rights exercised First Amendment is neces the “fire storm” which arose from this sary appropriate, suggestion, or but the original court’s reversal of the Harvey and worse, judicial statement, even that an Phillips convictions on the of the basis de impartial, jury disinterested was seated nied constitutional interest to receive a County retry Harvey Sweetwater in Jan speedy trial. uary beyond validity factual of the wildest characterization. If a ato Factually, our reversal of the forcible change by of venue to ensure trial an im rape kidnapping convictions and the partial jury slightest validity has even the stridency Wyoming Supreme Court’s Wyoming preconditioned jury where a dissents, opinion repeated regularly in- exist, likely will otherwise this case will sistently in letter-writing, media and clear- jurisprudence be exceeded this state’s ly guaranteed that a second trial for the during century.18 say the next To other County two individuals in Sweetwater pages wise is to use words to fill in an jury could not be conducted with a that had opinion. It would not true. subjqcted highest not been character pre-conditioning. campaign Armstrong Where a In the case of urged letter-writing (Wyo.1992), recently in editorial and to P.2d 1106 more tried oppose Wyoming Supreme scope County, retention of the Sweetwater and vir- justices temerity publicity provides had the ulence no Court who semblance decision, equivalency. enforce trial constitutional interests That latter au- writer, County, hardly in Sweetwater it could thored considered the seven expected general tenure of newspaper that the individuals scheduled for articles contrast, prosecution, expo- coverage. By clipping pro- trial in the second after files totally a sure scores of news stories and other vided in this case substantiate letter-writing outpouring publicity organized campaigns, could different continuum of impartial jury community would receive a fair and reaction. Even so far away Cheyenne, Wyoming, the local jurisdiction. in that The issue is not the on rights guaranteed by newspapers the First Amend- carried an editorial attack ment, exercised, Wyoming properly which were but individual members Supreme recommending an ad- opportunity judiciary of amelioration Court next election for provide impartial Amendment verse retention vote at the Sixth Simplistically, “sins” of the diverg- jurists. jury as the accommodation between temerity to in its ing guarantees. constitutional See also Const, law; County conviction Wyo. process art. due reverse Sweetwater § selecting reasonably impar- change granted proceeding 18. The of venue that was for the jury certainly thoughtfully succeeding Phillips demonstrative. retrial of and the ease in tial *30 1106 Maxwell, 333, 362-63, 384 86 S.Ct. speedy trial was visit- U.S.

the basis of a denied 600, 1507, 1522, upon Harvey, hapless the defendant. 16 ed L.Ed.2d Texas, problem of v. recognition Estes that the com- 532, 85 S.Ct. munity preclusive decision ex- arousal and den., 14 L.Ed.2d reh. only in is not voir dire isted demonstrable L.Ed.2d case, but, by comparison, in this conducted long recognized It has been granted venue change the of thereafter the constitution that under federal Phillips. Valley, This was not Simi Califor- jury to a defendant entitled nia, jury overtly police where officers had a free of outside influences and will de- acquittal; favorable to this was Sweetwa- according to cide the case the evidence angrily County, community ter aroused arguments in in presented and speedy the to a constitutional of itself. the course the dictatorially applied the trial should be Colorado, Patterson community. legal processes of the No one 556, 558, L.Ed. publicity from the contribu- was excluded (Holmes, J.).” (1907) victim, prosecutor, judge, and local tion — legislators.19 Marshall, 123 N.J. State v. 586 A.2d State (quoting Amin My was written with dissent Williams, 60-61, A.2d N.J. knowledge present case would (1983)). said follow. there remains even What Amin, P.2d at 272. more true: presents saturation of This case level securing preservation “The and of exposure overwhelming and in- media both jury goes very es- impartial Sheppard flammatory equally and directed to attack- of a fair trial. See sence County community newspapers, Casper Cheyenne and the Star- is an insular 19. Sweetwater According City Tribune. to exhibits this record or miles Lake and located about 200 from Salt briefs, Utah, appellate the this latter news- Ogden, Chey- attached to and somewhat further from enne, paper, only general the state’s circulation news- Although county capitol. the the state obviously paper, more moderate 10,583 carried stories square population and has a totals miles however, tone; general of sub- as a source 38,823, sixty-eight percent of of as County, scription in Sweetwater carried at least ownership eighty-one and the land is in federal twenty-nine other of the cases in vari- accounts adja- percent population the the live in two editorials, the and news ous letters to editor apart Springs cent cities fourteen miles —Rock stories. River, Wyoming. and Within the num- Green angered regarding publicity attacks and dire, only persons called for voir a few ber the first conviction reversal and need for outlying away far who areas as resided justice application the defendants sixty countryside and into the a small miles interruption for entire without continued town, arrivals, generally recent number in the dire, eight period of about months. The voir Wyoming Supreme Court’s had heard minority general exception of a with the persons Harvey Phillips and cases of reversal of generally were either recent arriv- who prior rape kidnapping convictions. Gener- outlying persons living als areas of the ally, persons who were the same did not those county who subscribe to the local did not newspaper. county a local subscribe to newspaper, status demonstrated the saturation May when the Between community anger publication and and hostil- of ity against Harvey Phillips reversed the and the out-of- both defendants trial, January for denied convictions appellate had reversed the local town court that Harvey the second trial for com- when measure, ego equal local court’s conviction. menced, carried in at there were related stories rights rape about the and sincere concern Springs thirty-nine the Rock least Rocket-Miner, editions of punishment perpetrators victims and daily county’s newspaper. stories, editorialized were reflected news editor, Eight generally letters to from were writing. and letter comments of the local sexual assault task force members extremely Phillips well- became Wyoming Supreme Court fairly frequent objects attacked known names named de- during period for conviction reversal and also published photographs from twenty-five front-page were speedy trial/rape fendants. At least until re- reversal conviction conspiracy prosecution the two defendants news stories which named commencement previous normally prior referenced the conviction for which the to commit guilty offenses county way. attacks had rendered reversal some Editorial includ- verdicts been years newspaper, jury publications two earlier. about ed local

H07 clear, ing operation judicial system therefore, of the It is upon that the trial of the punish by challenge issue of fact raised the coincident societal “need” to for such cause the court practically will particular rape perpetrators. these The upon be called to determine whether reversal, speedy in “fluke” based denied strength nature and opinion of the trial, especially community. inflamed the formed are such as in necessarily law by Published statements the victim added presumption raise the of partiality. The prior example fuel to the fire. No of a question presented thus is one of mixed change denied in of venue the face of the fact, tried, law and and to be as far as community emotional level of indoctrina- concerned, the facts are any like other tion has ever occurred in this state and the character, upon issue of that the evi- majority any fails to cite cases with the dence. any jurisdiction. same character from other Id. 98 U.S. 156. concept impartial jury The doctrinal of an Eighty-three years later, the Reynolds directly path- can be traced in its historical perception of proper jury as fair and way for American law: impartial was considered the United Marshall, Mr. Chief Justice Burr’s Supreme Dowd, States Irvin v. (1 Trial, 416), Trial Burr’s states the rule “light impressions, may to be that which (1961). The publici- crescendo of “adverse fairly presumed yield to the testi- ty” analysis reflected in in that case was offered, mony may may that which more than overmatched what occurred open leave the mind to a fair considera- isolated, geographically insular com- testimony, tion constitute no suffi- munity County of Sweetwater objection juror; cient to a but those reaction to the 1989 trial reversal— strong deep impressions which close particularly person so since the third in- against testimony the mind (Swazo) pled guilty, had volved received a them, opposition be offered in which very extended sentence which was also testimony will combat that and resist its publicized serving well time force, objection do constitute a sufficient penitentiary. transcript state to him.” barrage second trial identifies the Reynolds v. Otto of accusations the first reversal 25 L.Ed. 1,429 page transcript, within the with Waite, following quota- 1,016 Chief Justice encompassing nearly the voir dire Marshall, tion of Justice then went on to pages seventy-one percent of tran- script.20 relate: pleasant reading, very couple It is far from but the It’s been the last of three [JUROR]: juror opening provided first representative called in voir dire days, whenever was in there. it stage setting recognition Okay. you Did what read [PROSECUTOR]: attitude for what was to follow. any paper recently you in the cause to decide * * * right. THE COURT: All Mr. [Prose- of the issues in the case? cutor], you may juror]. talk to [the case, itself, As far as the no. I [JUROR]: you, your Thank Honor. [PROSECUTOR]: than, know, guess, you other it's the second [Juror], you anything Mr. heard about have or whatever. time around prior coming today? this case here Okay. you say When sec- [PROSECUTOR]: Yeah. I read about it in the [JUROR]: around, you time what do mean that? ond day. guys paper the other Talked to a few pretty I’m sure this is the one the [JUROR]: about it. back or Court sent whatever. right. All Aside from [PROSECUTOR]: or whatever it is. State that, you knowledge other about do have Okay. With that knowl- [PROSECUTOR]: the case? sir, you any opinions guilt edge, do have No. [JUROR]: or innocence of the Defendant? Okay. you say that When [PROSECUTOR]: Well, nothing I don’t know about [JUROR]: you paper day, read in the the other about it that, know, nothing. you Just the case or paper was that? changed guilty time and a law Rocket, it was the first Sunday. It was [JUROR]: act, guess I Okay. but not the so I don’t know. Would that have [PROSECUTOR]: —So guess got open Friday's mind. last issue? I’ve been Okay. you And [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: time, agree Okay. you probably way Do feel that at one did did [PROSECUTOR]: law, person presumed innocent you that a not? *32 guilty beyond Ah, know, proven a reasonable really. until not You it’s [JUROR]: Oh, doubt? just the I hate to see it done idea of— * * * Yes. [JUROR]: twice. That's kind of a waste. youDo think that’s a fair [PROSECUTOR]: What done twice? [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: country? way justice to administer this The trial? Only way. [JUROR]: trial, right. It’s the same [JUROR]: Okay. present And at the [PROSECUTOR]: one, isn’t it? time, willing you that the De- are to assume Okay. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: you fendant is innocent until see whether the See, that’s how little I know [JUROR]: guilty? proves in this trial him evidence paper the case. I read the one time. about Yeah. [JUROR]: all about it. That’s I know Honor, Your I don’t think [PROSECUTOR]: you feel what Do [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: anything I have further. happened probably right? in the first trial Honor, understanding may, your my it’s If I Well, they I feel like selected a [JUROR]: point, that at this the Court wanted us to limit through jury they went it. Time was a questioning our to those areas? problem. THE COURT: Yes. Um-hum. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: you. Thank [PROSECUTOR]: they bringing are So unless [JUROR]: [Juror], my Mr. COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE know, something * * * * this time—I don’t different *, actually, name is *. is what I’m myself. I in the courtroom and I don't wasn’t called. * * * * * brought up what would even be know *, you quiet COURT: have a voice. THE about it. podium you push the bench Will closer to youDo recall hav- [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: going juror] and to me. I'm and to [the read, ing you just what this last hearing you. have trouble —outside brought apparently am, week which memories, back some I too. [JUROR]: you anything did read about it last It THE COURT: Is it turned on? is. summer— It’s the first time COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE having quiet I’ve accused of voice. No. [JUROR]: been thing THE COURT: It's a terrible to be Su- —when that [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: loss,

judge hearing Mr. [Juror]. and have a preme Court decision came out about it? going Is that to af- COUNSEL]: anything [DEFENSE it. I don’t recall about [JUROR]: your ability fect to sit in this case? you have But do [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: [Juror], you Mr. can hear me now? understanding some of what the case about Yeah. [JUROR]: you as come into this Court? Sir, I’m from Sher- [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes. [JUROR]: idan, Wyoming Judge pointed as the out so I you And have an [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: jurors probably down don’t know my understanding happened what about a little bit about human here but I do know trial as the result of what the client in first telling you're sitting nature. And while there jury did? you things me and the Court that know about Yes. [JUROR]: case, something you I take it read Honor, Your based [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: triggered memory you had about some- your prior ruling, going I’m to ask that this thing you have heard about or read last sum- juror be excused bias. you quite know a lot about this case mer Well, I can’t excuse him on THE COURT: then? now, you’ve Mr. the basis of what established Oh, really really don’t know I [JUROR]: —I concerns, got I’ve some [Defense Counsel]. anything it. about obviously, you but I don’t think that have you I think men- COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE juror] is unable to be fair and shown [the Supreme something Court tioned about the impartial stage. at this I still don't know having reversed this case. publicity has on him. I don’t what effect this Yeah. [JUROR]: his attitudes are about Mr. Har- know what And turned back a COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE you vey’s guilt going I’m to let or innocence. that, sir, you guilty you And as said decision. inquiring in those have a lot of latitude areas, prosecutor] quite a lot when [the hesitated Counsel]. Mr. [Defense you you be fair in this trial. asked if could * * * right. All out, [Juror], [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Now, Judge pointed Mr. as you him COURT: If want to ask THE trying your criticize character or I’m not guilty Harvey that Mr. whether he thinks anything hard to know but it is sometimes there, permit you it, to do sits I’ll Mr. something, judgments about to form some that. get angry, Harvey, perhaps if at Mr. Okay. here, [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: at the Court and over then Okay? you COURT: THE the courtroom when leave that out of right, your All you COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE admit that? come in. Wouldn't Honor. Yeah. [JUROR]:

H09 you [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: —to where [Juror], you you my Mr. do recall what saw in story would listen to side of the as well as Springs that article in the Rock Miner last prosecutor’s]? [the weekend or— Sure, I would. [JUROR]: Parts of it. [JUROR]: Sir, Okay. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: would me, you Would tell COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE you agree perhaps jurors two different please, you what can recall? sitting on the same case in different locations Well, I him and believe there was [JUROR]: could, fact, up at different times come with name, thought, paper. one other And verdicts, evidence, different based on the if that it would have been tried and this—the they open talking had the mind we are about? State it back because it was—took too sent probably, yes. I think [JUROR]: long for the trial and stuff. Okay. you’re [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And Okay. The first [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: *33 saying you're willing to do that? long trial took too before— [JUROR]: Yeah. Right, got before it started. Uh- [JUROR]: you’ll give And [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: me huh. you’ll keep your the commitment that mind Okay. What were COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE open you’re beyond and if not convinced your thoughts you read that article? Harvey's guilt reasonable doubt of Mr. in this Oh, law, my thoughts was the [JUROR]: case, you acquit will him and find him not itself, know, you if—if it was innocent or guilty? whatever, guilty change it didn't within Yes, if I’m [JUROR]: not convinced eighteen months. whatever comes out. Okay. you So are [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE Yes. telling COUNSEL]: me that whatever the outcome of that Well, Honor, was, your just I would eighteen still—Let me first case going months later it is not you couple things. ask of other to be different? [Juror], Right. you any- [JUROR]: Mr. have heard or read you And thing know [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: else about the case? was, you? what the outcome of the case don’t my knowledge. Not to I [JUROR]: don’t Well, according paper, it [JUROR]: read that much on this. guilty. you When read the [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay. you’re So [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: paper you jury panel and knew were on this * * * telling Judge probably me and that it’s morning, you anyone for this did talk to eighteen guilty still months later? it? about being If it’s tried on the same [JUROR]: Oh, just guys at work and [JUROR]: thing. jury just you’re going A like the one stuff. pick already give opinion. has their honest you And where do [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And that’s little [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: work, sir? I can’t recall. mind, it, your put hard to out of isn’t Mr. Bridger Out at Coal. [JUROR]: [Juror]? And what were [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well, [y]eah. Yes and no. I [JUROR]: things some of the that were said in that —in mean, doing maybe it’s—it’s it twice but some- those conversations? thing changed. has I don’t know. Basically, what there is here. I [JUROR]: Um-hum. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: mean, probably swayed my opin- me in it’s got nothing against Because I’ve [JUROR]: swayed it me. It has let me ion—or hasn’t dpn’t him or I even know him or whatever. what little bit I know about the case. know No, I understand [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Okay. It have COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE mean, that, sir, and I know that. I I know you? some influence on had you’re coming saying in here and “I don’t know, my you I still Some. But [JUROR]: — necessarily” you like this man but what are people my biggest problem feel is some coming hearing you is the in here with as I'm Cheyenne people what here did. overturned "Well, idea, I know that he’s been convicted know,— You paper. that was in the And as before because Okay. COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE that, my neighbors own the result of some of me, just—it —to [JUROR]: finding, community have made that you? That bothers COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE presented the evidence that was based on economy. Bad on the [JUROR]: July the case back in then. And if that was you probably have THE COURT: I think 1987, certainly it should be the case now.” Is that, you? stronger feelings than don’t basically you’re saying? that what Well, yeah, but— [JUROR]: way, proven If it was I [JUROR]: tactful, trying to be THE COURT: You're guess. you, Mr. [Juror]? aren’t Okay. then So [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: halfway guess have to be I [JUROR]: me, telling you you’re what coming have that idea honest about it. put in here but now if we were to totally you to be hon- THE COURT: I want you heard different evidence evidence est. thing, time even if it went to the same I want to be more COUNSEL]: keep your open [DEFENSE you would mind sufficient- honest, that, Judge halfway said as the than ly— stranger Judge early is a on. I know the Yes. [JUROR]: grateful you, THE COURT: And I’m as is you the Defendant and as is State. Because am I and he has on his robe but so know, you express yourself you we want it to be a fair trial. You if this is the time should there, sitting you were over would want Mr. both of us. Well, my problem judge to level with the and level with that's whole [JUROR]: you. really happens in here. I don’t know what happened Right. just for me [JUROR]: the case. I know what Okay. get THE COURT: here. you, your Okay. Honor. [PROSECUTOR]: Thank [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: know, [Juror], through things you Mr. one of the men- You the— [JUROR]: Counsel], ago caught my can I tioned a few minutes interest THE COURT: Mr. [Defense you being question? ask him a were asked about the outcome Yes, you something sir. I wish said that to the effect that [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: guilty they you would. the outcome would be still being if were you thing. THE You told the Prosecutor tried on the same COURT: willing Harvey is Um-hum. [JUROR]: are to assume that Mr. inno- you. cent because that’s what he asked Are And that made me won- [PROSECUTOR]: you you you able to assume that he’s innocent? And der was it clear to based on what you you’re willing morning here I’m sure that to do that. heard earlier this that Mr. Har- — being vey today being willing But able are two is not here to be tried on the same * * * things. charge different he was before? *34 Well, something I could be able if told to me I assumed [JUROR]: it’s [JUROR]: change. I don’t know. so I could understand. would deep Okay. you COURT: You believe down in Let me tell [PROSECUTOR]: THE you’re charge changed. charge your soul that able to look at Mr. that the has That the Harvey charges Harvey today he's as he or that Mr. faces are and conclude that innocent charges conspiracy sits there? and that he was not him, charged conspiracy previously. Yeah. know so I with let I—I don’t And [JUROR]: really you conspiracy charge know the cases that went into it. me also tell conspiracy that or a don’t— My problem prove whole isn’t him or the acts that means that the State has to got things origi- some that are him there. different from the concern, [Juror], My charges. THE COURT: Mr. nal Now, that, you say changed knowing you that law but the act it to that does cause any stop hasn’t. or reflect or does of that make a Right. you? difference to [JUROR]: Well, Well, you say exactly THE COURT: And then that if what it [JUROR]: is— charge, same make it’s a dif- another's —if it’s still the old don’t no difference—if whole you thing, conspire, you say, think that the result will be ferent as I think—I then any don’t Now, put open-minded different. when I all of those would have to be about it. I—I go by things together, begin I to have doubts about would what I hear here. you you whether or not could turn Mr. THE COURT: What did think the required charges around loose if the evidence that he be were the first time words, you Harvey? can Mr. turned loose. In other afford Oh, thought they rape. you say him a reasonable doubt and can that I were [JUROR]: is, fact, Anything he’s innocent if he innocent? Do THE COURT: else? Oh, trying say you? you know of. understand what I’m to to not that I [JUROR]: charges THE COURT: One of the now is Yeah. [JUROR]: your conspiracy rape. response? THE COURT: What’s to ([The juror] laughed.) they prove I think would have to [JUROR]: laugh you THE COURT: You at that. Do to me that he is innocent. difference, Okay. a THE COURT: think that’s a distinction without sorry. I’m Mr. [JUROR]: [Juror]? (Pause) That he is inno- I don’t know. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: [JUROR]: prove you actually conspiracy? They What—what would cent. would have to to THE COURT: Pardon? he’s innocent. ([Juror] nodded.) actually conspir- That’s— What would [JUROR]: [JUROR]: Honor, acy? I much Your I What is it? don't know too COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE taking Sorry your stuff. I’m all of would renew— about this time. THE COURT: That’s not the law. moment, THE COURT: Just one Mr. [Ju- I know that isn’t. [JUROR]: ror], [Prosecutor], Okay. Mr. are THE COURT: bench, any questions you Mr. have for Mr. Where’s the statute book on this [Juror]? there couple, your Just a Hon- Brown? [PROSECUTOR]: beg you pardon? MR. BROWN: I or. answer, says Okay. good crimes here. That’s a THE COURT: It THE COURT: [Juror], glad you and I’m said that to me. That must be it. Mr. copy you I of a all. have [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I’m not mad at got Okay. proposed instruction. I’ve an instruction [JUROR]:

HH Okay. you. [PROSECUTOR]: Thank going propose. that I was We haven’t de- That’s all. [Juror], just got Okay. bated it. It’s a definition that’s THE COURT: Mr. Mr. Har- with, background. vey previously charged different tried and Here, Court, rape. THE COURT: I found it now. Sec- convicted of as know, you tion 6-1-303 of the Statutes reads reversed that conviction. He’s follows, guilty charged person conspiracy rape. as Mr. A now with to commit [Juror]: agrees conspiracy charged having unlawfully agreed to commit a crime if he He’s with they persons rape get with one or more or one or to commit with someone. I the feel- again. ing begin person you really more of them—Let me A see that —the differences guilty conspiracy agreeing rape raping being to commit a crime if he between is agrees persons they more the distinction one or without a difference. Am I wrong your feelings, of them will commit a crime and about one or more Mr. [Juror]? pretty right. them an overt act to [JUROR]: one or more of does That’s close to object agreement. That’s THE COURT: effect conspiracy. Pardon? short, agreement say you’re right. to com- I would [JUROR]: Agreeing [Juror], going mit a crime. to commit a crime is a THE COURT: Mr. I’m to ex- enough, you you’re juror crime. Fair Mr. cuse because [Defense Counsel]? first and I Yes, you sir. have some concerns but I want to talk [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: you’re up. Mr. THE COURT: because you going the first one I don’t want [Prosecutor]? Yes, talking jurors sir. back to the other [PROSECUTOR]: conspiracy anyone COURT: That's what is. about what went on here THE or to else you. very Thank until the is over. I’m [JUROR]: concerned Now, you Harvey might get THE COURT: do want to answer that Mr. not be able to a fair posed you? you question County. that was Do trial in Sweetwater He doesn’t have County. remember it? to be tried in Sweetwater given He can be conspiracy, you it If was asked a trial else and if can’t [JUROR]: somewhere he get in, jury give going me? that can him a clean slate ought had asked if that think I then we to take this case somewhere [PROSECUTOR]: you just would make a difference? else. I want talk with about how Well, know, might, you publicity County. *35 it or it wide the is in Sweetwater [JUROR]: agreed trying get would. I don’t know if he to it or not. I’m a feel for it because I don’t argued just might He have have been a live here. [Juror], part you way? of it. Mr. where do woA the Okay. Something Bridger that I work for Coal. It’s out [PROSECUTOR]: [JUROR]: might people’s be on minds and I’m—I don’t here. Bridger you really just know if said this or not but I’m THE COURT: I know what Coal is. assuming things. your position a few Tell me if I’m or What is out there? disagree supervisor. wrong. you stripping But do with what the I’m a [JUROR]: Supreme Court did? THE COURT: Pardon? Stripping supervisor. Yes. [JUROR]: [JUROR]: you’re Okay. Would that dis- THE COURT: So out in the mine? [PROSECUTOR]: agreement Supreme Yes. with the Court be such [JUROR]: way you COURT: You’re on shift work? that it would affect the listen to the THE Yes. evidence in case? [this] [JUROR]: dog you No. COURT: Do folks have a THE [JUROR]: change your disagreement Would house or room out there? [PROSECUTOR]: Supreme you Court cause it Yes. [JUROR]: with the —would you part change your verdict? THE COURT: Are affect No. No. room? [JUROR]: Okay. that Yes. [JUROR]: Understand [PROSECUTOR]: you’re nobody trying you you when the have THE COURT: So in there to tell other, change go way right? hands come in and out on shift feel one or the all you’re they Right. when come back off there [JUROR]: your Your beliefs are own shift? [PROSECUTOR]: trying change any them in Yes. [JUROR]: and no one is quite way. just trying Was a bit of dis- sure those THE COURT: there We’re make change way you room out there on the affect the reach and cussion in the beliefs won’t job job anywhere your else on the about this verdict in this case. render case, right. All Mr. [Juror]? [JUROR]: Now, light Right in the Okay. when it come out [JUROR]: [PROSECUTOR]: Springs questions you've Rocket is the time I heard been hit with in the Rock here, is it still fair for us to it out there. last few minutes you you willing And how would describe and able to set THE COURT: assume that are general people you might to this case any have and de- reaction aside concerns just you it? what see that talked about cide the case on the basis of Most of them— [JUROR]: and hear in evidence? Pissed off? THE COURT: Yes. [JUROR]: say, yes, people I I would [JUROR]: They They are talked with. Yeah. were. [JUROR]: concerned, anyway. they talking were about pretty THE COURT: So well stupid judges, At whom? huh? THE COURT: those overturning Well, Judges, it. Supreme At the State Court [JUROR]: [JUROR]: Supreme Court? THE COURT: At the yeah. Yes. (Laughter) [JUROR]: Harvey? know, about Mr. THE COURT: How Okay. just we’re THE COURT: You Oh, brought up even it wasn’t too, [JUROR]: beings, you know. human say, even know what it much. Like I I didn’t I know that. [JUROR]: it and then I read was about until then since Okay. you detect THE COURT: Did stuff, rape paper, and all that in the community hap- anger over what’s in the rape— assumed pened? you when it was COURT: Do recall THE No. [JUROR]: out? that it first came they anybody? THE COURT: Are mad at paper first come out? When [JUROR]: No. [JUROR]: Yeah, when it first came out THE COURT: Supreme THE COURT: How about Supreme had overturned it? that the they Court? Are mad at the Court? remember No. I don’t even [JUROR]: good. I It won’t do them no [JUROR]: they when did that. don’t believe so. Okay. It was about this time THE COURT: Harvey? they Are mad at Mr. THE COURT: later, along year, maybe about a little last February, know, they As far as I don’t [JUROR]: your rec- March. Does that refresh know him. ollection? Well, know, Okay. you peo- THE COURT: No, sorry. recall. I’m I don’t [JUROR]: Noriega ple at Manuel we can be mad you Okay. recall the— COURT: Can THE gun. know him. I don’t like the son of a don’t by reading you about it heard about the case you? How about just newspaper this last weekend? Yeah. True. [JUROR]: Yes. [JUROR]: sense, THE COURT: And it’s in that same that, Prior to when was the THE COURT: Mr. [Juror]. you anything about the last time that heard Right. [JUROR]: case? you anger COURT: Did detect THE Oh, something probably heard [JUROR]: Harvey? sense Mr. same going on but I—I don’t about it when it was No. [JUROR]: it that much. follow Okay. THE COURT: So is it fair sum- you Did hear talk out at the THE COURT: newspaper mary that if hadn’t been for the it job last week about this case? weeks, you arguments couple in the last Yes. [JUROR]: thought anything have more about wouldn’t general Okay. What was the THE COURT: case, huh? general *36 was the consensus of nature of—what opinion thing, My personal I own [JUROR]: job the about this case? out there on nothing it. wouldn’t have known about Oh, everybody just there was [JUROR]: no— Anything you say to THE COURT: want to figured time. it was the first me, Mr. [Juror]? everybody think that THE COURT: Does No. [JUROR]: Harvey guilty? Mr. is Okay. anything that THE COURT: Is there anybody could have been. [JUROR]: We'd — you general, to ask in Mr. [Defense want know, they was. You Whoever the name Counsel], Mr. [Prosecutor]? just telling about the—I believe it was were No. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: guy evidence on people and one turned three trying get feeling a for THE COURT: I’m something. it or coming by talking may the first what general But the consensus is THE COURT: excusing, juror Coun- that I’m Mr. defendant, is, [Defense is whatever his name that guilty? sel]. just hope so, No. [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: yes. I would think [JUROR]: understand, [Juror], you Mr. that I have noth- general Was it the consensus THE COURT: you ing personal against of these guilty rape, then he must be that if he isn’t things. something guilty of else? Okay. [JUROR]: No. [JUROR]: you, general Thank sir. COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE Was it the consensus THE COURT: proof previ- I think the final of it THE COURT: he was turned loose on that because sat,— Harvey ought you sitting charges, again, where Mr. tried he if were ous if he was something? I would be scared to death. [JUROR]: be convicted of —you would be scared to THE COURT: No. [JUROR]: So, talk, then, juror you, you? really, am I death of a like wouldn’t THE COURT: Probably, pretty way. but I think I’m put Can I draw the [JUROR]: fair—Let me conclusion, therefore, it this lucky. (Laugh- you really I think would be that the talk was honest. ter) Supreme Court rather than Mr. about Okay. Harvey Defendant? THE COURT: or someone—or the

H13 subsequent appendix attachments and the Although juror, the first whose recitation footnote, prior publish- have provided in the to the brief were three new stories recognition outspoken, most been the ed at the time of the commencement of the community predisposition in the Harvey January bias and parts some questioning continued as demonstrated seen and read which were an indeter- conciliatory attitude. The the trial court’s prospective jurors minate and number seventy- panel entire examined numbered apparently jurors some even while the a of that number five. Less than dozen waiting to be examined for dire were voir prior were not aware of originally proceedings. in the actual trial These news Wyoming Supreme Court conviction and stories are not found in the earlier filed sixty-four were Approximately reversal. in support change documents of a of venue case, of the of whom specifically aware motion, but were marked and are found as bias, thirty were removed for obvious basi- “A” “B” in exhibits and Volume VI of Supreme cally Wyoming because transcript present in the record. prior jury verdict. Court reversal of stories, newspaper published These three regarding this case news- The record in during Harvey immediately before or coverage Harvey Phillips paper trial, clear that a had earli- made conviction complex rape kidnapping cases is er occurred and that the conviction had filed incomplete. A trial court motion was been reversed action of the on the Phillips in the retrial dismiss story The first dated Court. was publicity prejudicial pretrial basis of excess Saturday, January regarding the conven- change of venue. and for an alternative following ing of for the trial the Phillips, filed in behalf of The motion second, Monday. The after the trial had comparable motion filed behalf Har- commenced, preliminary discussed voir dire vey, consolidated and then determined were events, related to examination third pretrial recognizing by an order of decision just had filed a lawsuit that victim joined adopted had that each defendant claiming damages for as- proceeding civil in the motion of the other. sault, including punitive million dam- $1 See, dire ages. example, the voir dis- motion, Phillips to the Attached juror having cussion of the thirtieth about separately not filed was newspaper story. Saturday read the record, although consolidated for decision court, newspa- by the trial were extensive re- interesting jurors who One the most publici- per clippings detailing the course of ultimately panel, did not mained on the but Wyoming Supreme decision ty from forty- serve, juror sequential number Those to mid-October 1989. of reversal four, college paper had done a who are similar to but not identical enclosures Har- coverage of the regarding media class appendix attached brief *37 assign- Phillips cases. The class vey and originally by Harvey. Although filed here coverage compare analyze ment was Harvey’s motion the same time denied at Su- following Wyoming the the events denied, subsequently giv- Phillips was was provid- reversal between preme Court change sequentially for a a of venue en Casper and the Star- by paper the local ed Harvey proceeding following the later trial circu- newspaper of statewide Tribune as a Janu- held in Green River from was member, as author jury panel lation. The through ary 8 she found that study, stated in the class essentially coverage was different dire examina- the thousand-page voir In the local approach the finding more by coun- a biased tion, reference was made specific Casper comparison to the newspapers in previously trial court to the sel and the text coverage, e.g., focused Star-Tribune newspaper stories. One of copies of filed antagonistic to the defendants. motion which was major differences between have, have wanted I that I would selected going to see a lot I we are Mr. think [Juror]. we would I think COUNSEL]: [DEFENSE day been, is over. jurors that worse before one of the too. You’re have provide jury fair change of tion and effort to the most a denied review of Judicial analysis the entire cir be selected under the circum- requires that could venue Consequently, stances, through examination of to counsel to both leave cumstance. 1,000 pages generally of voir dire broadly the more than in voir dire and a explore required. transcript and its content The effort consci- selective elimination. under with the basic start that review entiously to minimize was addressed bias Harvey Phillips cases standing Harvey among prospective jurors give community reac had caused monumental receptivity by seating some measure of touching very by simultaneously two tion panel. non-determinate members of the community perception and tender nerves interesting The trial court then made multiple- first was a responsiveness. The presented observation and with, by “com perpetrator sexual assault mid-pointin the most unusual dilemma. At (Swa- standards,” only person one munity examination, and then later initial voir dire second, per zo) punished, and the properly after the first course of selection had been pre well-recognized to be even more haps completed, judge the trial directed defense dominate, implied crit reactivity was to consider whether the few “un- counsel adequacy of the function of about the icism persons might serve should informed” who system speedy “denied judicial the local everybody already else advised of what anger, unrequited Ego trial.” knew in advance of the commencement of Wyoming Supreme Court dis very abusive stage It not determined at this trial. was exposure, and defen written for media sent prior conviction would that the evidence of prosecutor and the by the local siveness judge's in trial. The trial be admissible eigh judge the fact that it took trial about likely to those concern involved the shock straight try relatively teen months to not attuned to the facts when who were charge, fueled the sexual assault forward jurors they found out from other about reactivity. scapegoat A deep-seated prior history of the case. As a result provided by required and was assertion field,” “leveling playing action was con- judge and others in the com the next trial sequently taken in voir dire advise munity majority that the of the re- prior conviction and uninformed the first con Supreme Court had reversed permit inquiry versal to at least judge for punish original trial viction to —nominal then have been—whether that as it would Christopher reasons. See also unasserted knowledge their fairness and would affect Walsh, Note, CRIMINAL PROCE J. impartiality. Speedy to a Trial— Right DURE—The Wyoming Supreme Court Cor Has the might a faint All of this have achieved Balancing Test? Har rectly Applied if and more prospect of fairness a second (Wyo.1989),XXV 774 P.2d 87 vey v. specific had not then been made decision L.Rev. Land & Water court, empaneling following the trial panel, eighty-five percent jury unintentionally or other- jury, Within which was prior were aware of the of the members Added directed to ensure conviction. wise Nearly half of and its reversal. jury’s conviction predisposed status created solidly founded people had a the venire knowledge prior conviction reversal guilt speedy that a conclusion concept of a de- by the “non-substantial” legal unnecessary gimmick without anwas trial, surcharged the trial court nied *38 justification. by deciding that the State could the status Harvey’s state- proof into allocution insert question that the beyond any It is clear prosecu- made in first ments which he had following his decision to judge, trial second convic- following his unconstitutional tion then, change of when deny a venue Thus, presented of trial evidence was tion. depth surprised in voir dire about judicially embossed as a reaction, his confession ex- community knowledge and guilt.21 standard of superhuman judicial atten- almost ceeded jury verdict after day quarter to reach a and a surprising that it took a It was 21.

1H5 fairness, it standpoint Eng- of trial is American as it was once the most From Although allocution statement lish. this Court has said that indisputable that the embroidery under by judicial Fourteenth Amendment does not de- authenticated made, permit- jury in when while mand the use trials a State’s the circumstance York, jury procedure, Fay information to the ting the voir dire New exactly the same 332 U.S. 261 91 L.Ed. guilty the first verdict S.Ct. [67 evidence, 2043]; Connecticut, predetermined guilty verdict re- Palko v. 302 U.S. 288], beyond any question. every The 82 L.Ed. sult measure [58 constitutionally provided circum- has logical progression under these State trial inescapable: by jury. University Legis- first trial— See Columbia stances was Fund, guilty Drafting lative Research Index Di- guilt admission that the —allocution Constitutions, gest “unjustified” reversal of State 578-579 verdict was correct— by Wyoming Supreme Court—retrial— guilt

introduction of admission of via allo- 721-22, Dowd, 366 U.S. at 81 S.Ct. at 1642. acquaint- in addition to cution “confession” then went further: Justice Clark in anceship guilt determination presiding judge person- It is true that the prior jury verdict—inevitable conviction. ally jury examined those members decision real- jury The result for the panel petitioner, having whom no more istically foreordained with these two challenges, peremptory insisted should place. in essential fact find- factors With cause, be excused for and that each indi- eliminated, jury the instru- ing became notwithstanding opinion he cated that mentality punishment for the to ensure impartial could render an verdict. But community provided criminal and confessed Hughes Justice observed in Chief prior speedy trial “mis- absolution from the Wood, United States carriage justice” reversal. 145-146 81 L.Ed. 78 [57 (1936)]: “Impartiality is not a technical question provided context of conception. It mind. For state of is, impartial jury Wyo.Const. art. § the ascertainment of this mental attitude find, knowledge prior you do how indifference, the appropriate Constitu- plus after guilt determination of confession particular tests and lays tion down no benefit, sentencing to seek some- verdict procedure any not chained to ancient thing open that leaves an issue for fair and formula.” and artificial impartial present review in the verdict? protection build-up prejudice is clear process provide equal Here

Can this convincing. An examination of the process and due context? pattern of community then current States constitutional The basic United popular news thought as indicated impartial jury as for a fair and stature revealing. singularly media is originally Reynolds, enunciated U.S. 724-25, Dowd, at 1643- 81 S.Ct. and defined for an ex- 145 was structured Dowd, publicity circumstance cessive Dowd, a mur- 81 S.Ct. 1639. analysis re thoughtful and intense in an Indiana state court was

der conviction has since been sulting in reversal Dowd corpus habeas by the federal comprehensively reversed by five other followed stated: process. Justice Clark carefully considered United composed and Not one Supreme Court decisions. States England, from whom Western countenanced cases would have largely concepts its of of these has taken World County under dignity venued trial Sweetwater liberty and of the individual Louisi man, Rideau v. bequeathed to these circumstances. every has worth of 1417, 10L.Ed.2d ana, preservation, the safeguards for their us based on required reversal priceless of which is that of most specifics of the jury to the exposure of the as much jury. This has become *39 guilty finding kidnapping of not pro- and a compromise to commit The made was submission. offense. conspiracy commit a sexual guilt conspiracy to only finding-of one vide requirement jury's the the confession in detail to verdict be personal defendant’s court, charged. open he was In in the crimes for which based on evidence received facts, present appeal Thus, in operational this not from outside sources. in Mar the allocution evi- with the admission v. 360 U.S. shall [79 juror that each knew dence and assurance 1171, S.Ct. 3 L.Ed.2d we set 1250] conviction, identically prior this case the ju aside a where federal conviction in guaranteed status achieves a Rideau “through exposed rors ac were news this jury of conviction within verdict counts” information that was ad not present convic- proceedings. Rideau mitted held that the preju at trial. We reversed, course, was, Lee tion and F. “may dice from such material indeed be the same reversal Bailey achieved result greater” part than when it is Sheppard’s Sheppard conviction v. Sam prosecution’s “for it is not evidence then 333, 1507, Maxwell, 384 U.S. S.Ct. tempered by protective procedures.” At * * * (1966). Although publicity L.Ed.2d 600 S.Ct. [79 1173]. certainly greater in that achieved was during Shep- the extended cause celebre undeviating which, rule of Court was trial,

pard parallel features exist expressed Mr. Justice Holmes over particular, prior here from rever- result ago a century half Patterson v. sal trial which authored Colo- for denied rado, barrages S.Ct. and news 205 U.S. editorial [27 (1907): 51 L.Ed. appellate court. The non-achievable ex- 879] stated, repeated, pectancy there here system “The theory of our that the jury,” “I have confidence seeks in a to be reached case will conclusions implausible, impossi- not but the only by argu- evidence and be induced ble. court, ment open by any pointed has also out that But the Court influence, private whether of outside elections, not like to be “[Ijegal trials are print.” talk public meeting-hall, through the use won 350-51, 86 Sheppard, 384 U.S. at S.Ct. at radio, newspaper.” Bridges and the 252], California, v. at 271 [314 [62 Wisconsin, Groppi 400 U.S. [(1941)]. L.Ed. S.Ct. (1971), the L.Ed.2d 571 court S.Ct. insisted the Court has that no one be And change of venue involved itself with stat- punished charge for a crime without “a utory prohibition for misdemean- Wisconsin fairly public fairly made and tried constitutionally ors and a similar applied prejudice, passion, free of excite tribunal protective persuasion. The court discerned ment, tyrannical power.” Chambers a change that the entitled to accused was Florida, 309 U.S. 236-237 [60 required provide of venue if a fair trial. 472, 477, (1940). 84 L.Ed. S.Ct. 716] Here we concerned with the methods are given “Freedom of discussion should be impartial jury in a available to assure an compatible range with the es the widest where, prejudicial situation because requirement of fair and order sential publicity reason, other or for some justice.” ly Pennek administration jury is community from which the to be Florida, 328 U.S. amp v. [66 already permeated drawn 90 L.Ed. S.Ct. 1295] hostility the defendant. The allowed toward it must not be to divert But one. Mr. Justice “very purpose problem is an ancient trial from the of a controversies, Holmes no more than common- system adjudicate stated ... civil, when, ago, place generations he not- the calmness two both criminal judge has sat with “[a]ny ed that who solemnity of courtroom accord spite they juries forms ing legal procedures.” Cox v. Louisi knows likely impregnated extremely to be ana, are [85 atmosphere.” (Black, J., environing Frank dissent 13 L.Ed.2d 487] 309, “legal procedures” Mangum, ing). Among [35 these

1H7 582, 595, 313, 1173, (dissenting L.Ed. 969 79 S.Ct. 3 L.Ed.2d 1250 ] opinion). (1959). 509-10,

Groppi, 400 U.S. at 91 S.Ct. at 493. Recognizing given the consideration first recognizing congruity In involved Marshall, in and then in Murphy, followed decision, the Rideau the court said: surely the historical relevance can not be not decided until Rideau was but ignored regarding sequencing the time message years its echoes more than 200 publicity barrage. Murphy seven- experience quest of human the endless publication month hiatus between and trial for the fair administration of criminal here; rather, have, best, is not found we at justice.12 two-day lapse coverage in news before jury began voir dire. Harris, See Rex v. 3 Burr. (K.B.1762): Eng.Rep. found, however, “Notwithstand- The District Court actions, ing locality of some sorts of or of the news concerning petitioner articles misdemeanors, informations for if the matter appeared entirely had almost during the all, fairly can not be tried at or can not be period between December Janu- impartially proper county, tried in the it shall (Lord adjoining county.” be tried in the next ary being the latter date seven Mansfield.) jury months before the in this case was Groppi, 400 U.S. at 91 S.Ct. at 493. were, moreover, They selected. largely addition, quoted Justice Stewart Crock factual in nature. Court, Superior er v. Justices of length the trial court 178-79, Mass. 94 N.E. 376-77 go jurors must in order to select who (1911) in footnote: appear impartial to be is another factor justice “... There can be no in a trial evaluating jurors’ relevant those as- by jurors by passion, warped by inflamed impartiality. surances of In a communi- violence, prejudice, awed menaced ty where most veniremen will admit to a public opinion the virulence of or mani- disqualifying prejudice, reliability festly by any operating biased influences protestations may the others’ be drawn insidiously openly either to such an question; proba- into for it is then more poison judgment extent as to part community they ble that are of a prevent the of fair freedom action. Jus- accused, deeply hostile to the and more tice cannot be assured a trial where likely they may unwittingly have enter the other considerations minds been influenced it. single those who are to decide than the 802-03, at S.Ct. at Murphy, U.S. desire to ascertain and declare the truth according A law and evidence. general jurisdiction ought not to Furthermore, recognition perva- powerless left under the to do law court, responsibility supervisory sive within reason all that the conditions of Burger, concurring in the Chief Justice permit society pro-. and human nature 803-04, at judgment Murphy, unprejudiced panel jury vide an stated: trial.” BRENNAN agree I Mr. Justice with Groppi, 400 U.S. at 511 n. 91 S.Ct. at woefully judge was remiss that the trial 493 n. 12. prospective jurors failing to insulate coverage of this media persuasion cannot taken from bizarre Converse prevent Florida, taking steps to case and in not Murphy from among pretrial of the case In the discussion hesitate to case, Although I would not Wyoming Supreme Court them. present in the ex- petitioner’s conviction supervisory responsi- reverse is called to exercise a supervisory powers, were system. A mis- ercise of our bility judicial for the state case, agree ignore responsi- this a federal take is made when we petition- that the circumstances bility by similar circumstances as defined of a not rise to the level er’s trial did Marshall v. United *41 ty. rightful of of the of West- Clause One boasts of the Due Process violation is the has Amendment. ern civilization State the the Fourteenth establishing guilt solely on of the burden Wyoming, the of State Justification evidence in court produced basis of and disregard the majority, now this and assuring an under circumstances accused developed comprehensive course of safeguards procedure. the of a fair all Supreme Court decisions comes States rudimentary These conditions for deter- principles of eluci- misapplication the from wanting if mining guilt inevitably are the Yount, 467 U.S. in Patton v. dated judgment is to in jury which sit a (1984). The being human comes to its task fellow Patton, First, in are twofold. differences poisoned ineradicably its mind with publicity the heightened came before first U.S., against him.” at 729 [81 it developed here because trial whereas at 1646]. first and the trial verdict a reversal me- community perceived and subsequent Yount, 467 U.S. at 104 S.Ct. at 2900. consensus dia-directed that denied Examples litigation of recent state court justification. The sec- trial insufficient was requested involving change a of venue to greater was the ond and even difference a fair trial informative. In provide is also recog- here where the trial court conduct Williams, People v. 48 Cal.3d keeping the secret nized the need avoid Cal.Rptr. P.2d 152-53 the jurors applied then from some sequential the decision time of re- judi- post-conviction supra-imposition recognition: quires Harvey’s cial confession introduction of petition Whether raised on for writ of Thus, statement evidence. allocution into appeal judgment or on from mandate panel the members who were informed conviction, reviewing the court must in- in conviction were then directed prior the dependently the record and examine de- by the made in allocu- decision statements trial is termine de novo a fair or whether first- by Harvey post-conviction tion * * * The factors to be was obtainable. trial “confession.” gravity considered are the nature and trial; proce- fair This was not a it was offense, the extent of the nature and the predetermined irretrievably di- durally coverage, size of the communi- news the “ 'lit- result. This was not a case of rected in ty, the status of the defendant tle, any, public’ talk in the tri- if between prom- community, popularity * * * 1028, 104 Like- als.” Id. at S.Ct. at 2887. inence of victim. wise, significant did not this case involve a course, the question presented on Of profound ef- “lapse in time had a [which] appeal judgment from a of conviction is and, impor- community more fect on peti- necessarily that on a different from “ jury, softening effacing tantly, on the or signifi- ‘A tion for writ of mandate. opinion.” Id. at 104 S.Ct. at pretrial difference cant between posttrial review is after convictionin Just as Justice Stevens concluded determining a defendant re- (quoting from Justice whether dissent Yount Dowd, under impartial ceived a fair concurrence Frankfurter’s standard, 1646), the re- majority “reasonable likelihood” S.Ct. at retrospective....’ other view is to authenticate retrial Sweetwa- decision words, may is voir dire demonstrate that County under circumstances ter these publicity prejudicial no ef- legal philosophic jus- pretrial had completely without or fect,” may conversely corroborate tification: * * * allegations potential prejudice. society has “More than one student of differently, prejudicial least the view that not the Put because expressed publicity jury selection is quality of a civili- effect of before significant test speculative, settled charged necessarily it is is its treatment of those zation necessity crime, “any as to of remov- particularly with offenses doubt in favor passions of a communi- al ... should resolved arouse

1H9 * * * trial, change.” guilt, venue After there nothing left jury for the presumption change favor of a venue regarding consider reasonable doubt. The unnecessary, for the matter then jury transposed into the handmaiden of analyzed light the voir dire of avenger with sword in hand. There is actual, jury pool available and the here far- more than a reasonable likeli- *42 jury panel question actual selected. The nearly hood—it sociological reaches a cer- whether, light then is in of the failure to tainty defendant, when retried in —that venue, change reasonably likely it is County Sweetwater speedy after the denied in the defendant fact a fair trial. received reversal, not, could not and did receive either a fair trial or access to consideration facts, analyzed The court then wheth- by impartial jury. A guilty verdict was petition er raised on for writ of mandamus certainty. near appeal judgment or on from the and convic- tion, and found the standard of review to Similarly State, in Hughes 490 A.2d showing be the same. “A of actual preju- (Del.Super.1985), ju- the fact that the * * * ” required.’ dice ‘shall not be Id. 259 acquired knowledge rors pri- defendant’s Cal.Rptr. at 774 P.2d at 153. The or conviction in an earlier trial was suffi- analytical factors “viewed in iso- cient to prejudice. establish The totality of another, lation but in relation to one com- applied circumstances test in Hughes is pelled change in of venue [Williams].” equally persuasive in require this case to 117,- population, Id. Those included small logic reversal as a matter of and law. Pre- 000; strong press; widespread local com- dominating considerations in the Delaware munity case; awareness of the and extend- knowledge case were prior convic- ed and inflammatory publicity sometimes publicity regarding tion and polygraph test- which continued to the date of decision. Here, ing. Harvey’s allocution evidence story Each news identified the defendant undeniably was just more decisive than repeatedly page and was found in front and generally questionable polygraph in result lead stories. The details were sensational- among Hughes, scientifically even unso- ly case, extrapolate related. To from that phisticated jurors may who have been cho- we would find here each of those factors sen to serve. In the factual context of County also existed Sweetwater for the Hughes, we a similarly have here unrebut- Phillips —exacerbated presumption impartial jury ted that an was media-sponsored attacking Wy- attitude impaneled. never reversal, oming Supreme then totality of the circumstances under- capped Harvey’s at trial the use of standing was in People likewise enforced symbolism allocution statement. The Boudin, 97 A.D.2d 469 N.Y.S.2d 89 overtly the case was “embedded preconceived opinion because of public Cal.Rptr. Id. 259 consciousness!!]” among arising the citizens from the “invid- Unquestiona- at 774 P.2d at 155-56. publicity tending ious” ill arouse will bly, spectacular these crimes after reversal “ ” prosecution’s “asser- vindictiveness. community ‘aroused attention’ “ jurors [might] ultimately tion that 12 possibility probability] ‘the of an un- [or steadfastly found who maintain [would] originate widespread pub- fair trial [did] is, impartiality their under the circum- facts, licity describing statements and cir- intrinsically suspect. stances of this case” cumstances which tend to create a belief ” Amin, Id. at 469 N.Y.S.2d 89. See guilt.’ Cal.Rptr. Id. [of] C.J., 262, Urbigkit, dissenting. P.2d at P.2d at 155. logic decisionally terms of reason and Particularly decisive here is the fact that by simple determine statement that what Wyoming Supreme the basis for Court re- is, fact, not, surely adjudicatory lacks constitutionally denied tri- versal— legal merit or worth. emphasized perceived validity al— guilt reversing particular Although not community jury panel within the case, 800 P.2d 935 participants. When the allocution evidence Newcomb (Alaska community perception App.1990) examines and enumer- was added to the case the ABA standard for should, significant tion of the to a factors which ates justice: extent, in this case. our decision inform factor described Newcomb Each adverse Criminal The ABA Standards for Jus- nature of Those include the occurred here. precise with the pointedly tice deal more inherently it publicity whether problems presented prospective here: “A present factors prejudicial. Additional re- juror exposed who has been include in Newcomb here but not found in- reports highly significant members victim, editorials, by the published letter formation, such as the existence or con- comment, and statements judicial news confession, incrimina- of a or other tents Here, the confession prosecution. ting matters inadmissible conviction, con- sideways by first comes evidence, amounts of in- or substantial *43 reversed, by followed the stitutionally to be material, subject to flammatory shall be proceed- in that admission of the allocution challenge regard for without cause guilt at trial. ing of second as evidence testimony juror’s as to state prospective of the relevance also addresses Newcomb (ABA for Criminal of mind.” Standards the reports important details that news of (2d Justice, 3.5(b), sec. at 8-43 ed. ch. actively dispute, seek to defendant will situation, 1980).) disqualification In this editorials, in- high emotionally charged for is ABA Standards Crimi- automatic. community continuing to trial a terest Justice, Commentary, 3- nal ch. sec. population small base. relatively awith (2d 1980). 5(b), ed. at 8-47 Decisively, case differs from this Newcomb at 462 N.E.2d at Taylor, Ill.Dec. provide not a nine-month it did because 488. following periods high of hiatus before trial predom- Taylor court enunciated the The publicity. well-recognized inating of multi- concern a to follow The trial of second brother participant exposure interaction: the penalty murder conviction of death problem perplexing here is a one The of consideration occasioned first brother require appraisal not which does change of venue similar factors sincerity jurors the or the trial of either Superior Placer Williams of probable ju- judge. It is most Cal.Rptr. County, Cal.3d spoke sincerely they testified rors when P.2d 799 That court examined opinions on the they had formed no signifi- four were five facts within which one of the information that defen- basis change mandating the of trial loca- cant in passed a lie test and was dant detector These included: tion. released, and the other was not released. publici- (1) nature and extent of the concern is that this information (2) the size of Placer ty, population nature, is polygraphs, its unlike about (3) County, gravity the nature and details. This is not other factual offense, (4) of the victim and the status average type of information which accused, (5) political whether ignore. effect is juror easily can Its present. are overtones unconscious, but at same subtle 494, 668 P.2d 801. Cal.Rptr. at Id. 194 juror potent. time Whether consideration of footnote was Added feelings express of it or can aware during substantial time passage of a high- exposure type accurately, absent.22 publicity extensive was enough to ly inflammatory material is partiality. In presumption of raise the People Taylor, 101 Ill.2d 363-64, protect the defendant’s 462 N.E.2d 482-83 order Ill.Dec. jurors impartial jury, those fair and portrayal a similar there was way in this should “saliency had tainted of the infor who been and the “awareness” pointed have been excused. The court out evalua mation.” (1982) Popularity, A.B.A.J.668 suggested by Juries Gains Justice Mosk 22. The alternative Williams, Cal.Rptr. at P.2d import jury special in- cited in was to concurrence moving' Imported at 807. the trial. See Use stead H21 ” judge’s apparent. Similarly dilemma is unfairness.’ recognized was judge Once the is aware that there has probability of prejudice irreversible “[t]he * * * publicity been intensive which included jury illustrated the actual voir highly dissemination of inadmissible and totality dire.” Id. “The of the circum information, prejudical judge has no stances in the ease before clearly us re inquire choice but to as to the details population veals that Allegheny potential juror which the remembers. County prejudice was infected with juror As soon as the mentions these de- this defendant.” Id. 307 S.E.2d at 349. tails, juror subject challenge to a Consequently, totality of the circum Any questions for cause. further serve required stances review a new trial at a highlight the information and to different Reeb, venue. State v. Cf. any increase the likelihood that inferenc- N.C. 415 S.E.2d 362 where the es, drawn, remembered, once will now be preclusive factors similarly were not found. drawn, yet inferences not will This same systematology not be province drawn. There is no alternative potential juror. but to excuse the constitutional provide law to a fair trial thoughtfully stated Johnson v. 366-67, Id. 78 Ill.Dec. at 462 N.E.2d at 485- (Miss.1985): 476 So.2d 1209-10 *44 The Illinois court the resolved issue sim- right by The to a fair trial impartial an plistically: conclude that the defen- “[w]e jury is fundamental and essential to our dant did not a fair Id. 78 [receive trial].” government. form right guar- of It is a 368, Ill.Dec. at 462 N.E.2d at 487. Actual- by anteed both the federal and the state ly, the court found error in both the denial State, constitutions. Adams v. 220 Miss. challenges of particularly for cause for five 812, 72 So.2d 211 “In all criminal jurors well-informed as well as the trial prosecutions, the accused enjoy shall the rejection change court’s the of of venue right speedy public trial, to a by and an request of which both defects are forceful- impartial jury of the State and district ly present illustrated in this case. wherein the crime shall have com- been recognized: Utah “The constitutions of mitted, ...” U.S. Constitution Amend- guaran Utah of the United States both prosecutions ment VI. “In all criminal right tee a by defendant the of trial an right the accused shall a have to ... a impartial jury.” James, State v. 767 P.2d speedy public by impartial trial an (Utah 1989). The Utah court fol jury county where the offense was lowed the Sheppard, California cases of committed_” Miss. Const. Art. 384 U.S. 86 S.Ct. 1507 and Maine v. 26. § Superior County, Court Mendocino apparent potentially It is that two com- Cal.Rptr. Cal.2d 438 P.2d 372 peting conflicting rights are embod- (1968) assessing in “the burden on the de provisions ied in the of both constitu- fendant should be understood to he right by impartial tions: the trial an must raise a ‘reasonable likelihood’ that jury right in and the to trial the locale such a trial cannot be afforded him.” where the offense committed. It was James, 767 P.2d at 552. Factors enumerat repetition merits that both of these in ed the California case law were con rights are afforded the accused. Consti- change sidered and the venue was mandat vicinity provision tutional for trial the community ed on the size of the based safeguard against of the crime is a individual citizen emotional re involvement hardship unfairness and involved when sulting widespread publicity. from See prosecuted an accused is in a remote Jerrett, also 309 N.C. State place. Mining v. Minnesota & Platt (1983) (quoting Sheppard, S.E.2d Co., Mfg. 1516),which, at 86 S.Ct. at (1964). As this court said in conviction, L.Ed.2d 674 re-emphasized reversal of “ Eddins v. 110 Miss. system always ‘our of law has endeav (1916): prevent probability ored to even the So. process obtaining for impartial jury compulsory served by trial an right

“The witnesses, organic speedy by an guaranteed law to a trial is state, county jury when it is doubtful that district impartial or alleged can in the jury such a be obtained is to have offense homicide, the venue of county of been committed. When location person his is but on trial with the offense cannot be established life for rights requests when he asking placed certainty, venue venue, imagin- no there is change a county corpus delec- or district where refuse, except, possibly, able reason found, any county or ti or [delicti] county, cost to slight a additional victim trans- district which the added).” (emphasis ported. adjudi- added). its Mississippi (emphasis court assumed Wyo.Const, art. 10§ catory presented constitu- responsibility We then consider the continued wisdom three-stage developing pro- tional law a which further the 1975 Judicial Conference (1) right analysis: “The accused’s directed, cedural part: clearly venue not self- change to a (a) responsibility It is the of court and [sup- file executing; the defendant must person charged to insure to each counsel Johnson, 476 So.2d ported motion].” crime a trial. (2) has “[T]hen, the accused (b) brought charge A criminal shall be it is change of venue when doubtful days following the within 120 obtained; impartial jury can be filing of information indictment. present implicit there is such doubt is when (c) ex- following periods shall be public strong sentiment defen- time trial: computing cluded dant; application, upon proper there arises proceedings All related *45 exists; presumption that such sentiment deficiency illness de- mental or and, the state then bears burden fendant. rebutting presumption.” Id. 1210- charge. (2) Proceedings on another (3) changed Venue will unless (3) Delay granted by pur- the court during voir presumption is rebutted dire. (d). to subdivision suant record which demonstrates a The factual (4) the dismissal and The time between presump- failure of the state rebut charge. refiling of the same against strong public sentiment tion of (5) by Delay occasioned defendant’s Mississippi in the 1985 trial defendant application therefor. change of counsel or persuasively more demon- is even Johnson (d) granted as may be Continuances Harvey strated in the trial follows: County. rea- For this second Sweetwater (1) supported motion defendant On son, concepts well-de- constitutional and defendant’s affidavit defendant procedural require fined standards reversal counsel. provided to fair trial in order that a will prosecuting attor- On motion of granted. Harvey change after a of venue ney the court if: (i) expressly con- The defendant TRIAL SPEEDY IV. sents; or Wyoming Constitution We start with (ii) The evidence is unavail- state’s promptly September 1889 and written in prosecution has exercised able electorate of the approved by a vote diligence; or due to provide: state (iii) due Required in the administra- prosecutions ac- In all will justice the defendant tion right to defend cused shall have the prejudiced. substantially not be counsel, to demand person and accusation, Rules for the District Rule Uniform nature and cause (U.R.D.C.) Wyoming the State of thereof, confronted Courts of copy have a to be judges him, (approved by the district to have with the witnesses

H23 Wyoming State, state as the constitutional courts court in Harvey v. (Wyo. P.2d 87 general jurisdiction September 20, on 1989) State, Phillips 774 P.2d 118 8, 1985). January 1984 and effective (Wyo.1989), presented present for this year how, approval explain Just about one after of decision to with denied consti 204, U.R.D.C., Rule the incident occurred rights tutional speedy to a from which these events arose Rock prosecution another and a further trial on Springs. January On a criminal exactly the same facts and with the same complaint July was filed and thereafter on witnesses and evidence and the name eighteen more than and one-half of the changed escape offense double later, between, months a trial was held. jeopardy, prosecution does this now demon Swazo, alleged participant, a third who had strate absolution from the constitutionally jail been held in without bond about protected right speedy to a trial? This months, plea fourteen entered a and was majority opinion from which I now dissent testify sentenced so as to be available to simply does not challenge answer that against Harvey. pled Swazo stated that he logic. either majority law or resolu being waiting out because of told that after tion cannot be found to challenge meet that jail, fourteen months in he would have to in honest Wyo. consecration with either wait another six go months before he could Const, art. 10 or to Rule U.R.D.C. § to trial. Swazo v. 800 P.2d 1152 days Instead designed of 120 as a limita C.J., (Wyo.1990),Urbigkit, dissenting. The tion in joint Rule U.R.D.C. action jointly subsequent conducted trials and adaptation, we had one and one-half Phillips convictions of were years to the first trial and now a total of by opinion May reversed of this court in years four to the second trial. Even if we the constitutional basis of denial of original escarp Conspiracy trial. Constitution and the charges precluded were substituted for the balancing courts’ own rules into a test of and reversed charges substantive events alleged judicial evil versus admitted default by separate followed retrials which then indoctrinated Barker Wingo, exactly years commenced almost four after L.Ed.2d the occurrence of events from which the adequately this decision still does not bal charges presented. were unjustified delay against pur ance media daunting challenge sued societal demands for desired logic, in law and retribut *46 prior not to exclude the decisions of this ion.23 (D) In a concentrated and authoritative effort to The time between the dismissal and the bring rights Wyoming some refiling charge; sense into the of of the same speedy guarantee (E) citizens to receive a Delay by trial as a change occasioned defendant’s constitution, protection Wyo- of their state application of counsel or therefor. ming recently Rules of Criminal Procedure have (4) Continuances not to exceed six months changed specific been to define a schedule. arraignment may granted from the date of be rules, adopted by Wyoming Supreme These by the trial court as follows: Court effective March assess final re- (A) supported by On motion of defendant sponsibility authorizing for de- affidavit; over-extended lays Wyoming Supreme itself. (B) attorney motion of the On for state part: W.R.Cr.P. states in 48 or the court if: (b) consents; (i) Speedy expressly trial.— The defendant or court, (1) (ii) responsibility It is The state’s evidence is unavailable and diligence; prosecution counsel and the defendant to insure that the has exercised due timely defendant is tried. or (2) (iii) charge brought Required A criminal shall be in the due of administration days following arraignment justice 120 be trial within and the defendant will not substan- provided tially prejudiced. unless continued as in this rule. (3) (C) following periods proposed shall be excluded If a continuance is court, computing the time for trial: state or the the defendant shall be noti- (A) proceedings objects, All related to the mental fied. If the defendant the defendant defendant; delay may deficiency writing illness or must show in how the (B) Proceedings charge; prejudice another defense. (C) (5) Delay granted by pursuant Any request a trial to a date the court to continue (b)(4) Section or more than six months from the date of ar-

1124 during prose- County period district In cution of for his 1986 crime. March raignment be directed to court to must Center, under the au- the Rural Justice appeals be the trial would taken which from thorship Kathryn and Maurice D. Fahnestock by may granted that court accor- grant Geiger and a from the State funded (b)(4), above. dance with Section Institute, study published a entitled Time Justice (6) Any or case not tried contin- in Rural Jurisdiction Courts. Justice: Caseflow provided shall be dismissed ued as in this rule study in the on-site were nineteen Included arraignment. days after 120 unpleas- four were courts in antly states. Statistics (7) is for If the unavailable defendant revealing County, regarding Sweetwater presence proceeding which the defendant’s and the with the introduction statement statis- required, case be continued for tics that followed: but no time the trial court reasonable Many dispose rural do not of cases in a courts days than after the defendant more 120 fashion, timely especially criminal matters. or case continued as available further counties, disposition times Fieldwork in 19 provided in this rule. counties, self-reporting and the 12 exam- from A for lack of dismissal preceded site ination statistics selec- the state this rule shall bar from under significant degree delay show that a tion again prosecuting for the the defendant same jurisdictions. majority of rural exists made a sites, offense unless the defendant written Among the Sheridan fieldwork speedy trial can demonstrate County, sin, County, demand for a or Wyoming, and Iowa Wiscon- delay. prejudice dispose from the of the criminal cases in of 90% counties, eight change governing speedy those six months less. This in the rules disposition is the median criminal days. over 180 compared with the statistics avail-

trials can compiled study able to a committee * including various state courts the Sweetwater AND CIVIL CASES CRIMINAL Disposition Days to CIVIL CASES

CRIMINAL CASES 50% 90% 50% 90% WYOMING 72 74 Sheridan ro 0\ Johnson " n - H SWEETWATER n tN Lincoln \0 Uinta vo If) pretrial felony Geiger, & Time The statistics for detention Fahnestock to Justice: Caseflow (March three in the Third Jurisdiction Courts 29 defendants courts in Rural General added, 1990) similarly (emphasis part). Judicial District are informative:

PRETRIAL DETENTION PRETRIAL PRETRIAL FELONY PERIOD (MONTHS) DETENTION DETENTION DEFENDANTS range days days median JURISDICTION LODGED *47 WYOMING 0-450 SWEETWATER 0-90 Lincoln 0-90 Uinta excep supra, delay. In all most Geiger, (emphasis but the & at 43 uncontrolled Fahnestock circumstances, disposition added). within six tional required. forty-five days arraignment will This of hundred two months Seven —about Wyoming judiciary's to

years ninety percent disposition of is effort return crimi- —for pledge Wyoming the compliance state of with the the citizens nal cases does not show Mag nearly originated years old guarantee speedy trial. Fortu- now constitutional 98, Urbigkit, judge Harvey, change See 774 P.2d nately in and redirection of na Charta. J., concurring. Congress specially reached the Barker, equivalent operations, statistics would Furthermore, statutorily reversing present same end in he found 1992. rule, permit 92 S.Ct. 2182 enactment of the will not W.R.Cr.P.

H25 today reject yielding I am no more convinced that the to that character of constitu- Magna England, Charta of the Constitution right adjudication by newspaper tional and nation, of this and the Constitution of the community criticism, I reject and also bail- Wyoming validity pro- state of have lost ing these issues into a neat delineation of speedy I I vide a trial than was when wrote packaged time into the majority decision special prose- first concurrence for the identifying period July between May Harvey, cution 1989. 114 P.2d at January and trial date of 1990: J., Urbigkit, concurring. I specially am span time in this case between the [T]he persuaded also not that this court’s double filing complaint date and jeopardy by-pass morally logically and date of the start of the trial is neither justified reversing its well-considered “presumptively prejudicial” signifi- nor disposition in those cases which were di- Thus, cantly long. calculating after speedy rights rected to enforce trial span time analyze we need not provide speedy privileges trial within each speedy trial issue further. justification by subjec- court. If Maj. op. at 1079. I find it to be nonsensical. provided tive non-enforcement is to be play counting game with the time conduct, judicial failure and default little between mid-1989 and the actual second expectancy society valid retained that and, consequently, ignore trial date pre- general regularly enthusiastically will years encompassed vious two and one-half accept apply responsi- rules of mutual prosecutorial involving within efforts bility. Harvey. regard, reject also Essentially totally I am unconvinced analysis compliance to find that with the years that —after two and one-half of fail- intendment of Rule U.R.D.C. was properly prosecute ure to in one effort— achieved, apparently this court tradi- the State can start over with a now new tionally agreed ignore had anyway.24 extrapolate try clock to another of- Harvey, recognition speedy in first of a fense from the events to secure a second violation, delay was forced into a period to accommodate the constitutional days in Harvey I and can now wonder speedy trial. Harvey, interest as we present speedy about the trial violation of Harvey, stated in 774 P.2d was arrested 1,460 days original since arrest. He co- January subsequently 1986 and convict- gently persuasively argued appellate charged (conspir- for one of the ed events brief: acy kidnapping) to commit in this second prosecution years speedy four effort of later com- The State defended [the trial] * * * mencing January un- by arguing 1990. He was not that the issue facts only period der arrest for the brief between presented question “pre- this case mandate in the delays” issuance reversal indictment because of the succes- prosecution in June of 1989 until rear- prosecutions They first sive of Defendant. July rested on or about 1989 on an begin argued that the clock did not probable affidavit of cause which was iden- run on the trial issue until no pro- tical to the initial affidavit which had Harvey’s arrest on the later than Mr. early January duced his first arrest charges July on or about 1989. new regard, again urge the In this we difference I can find is the “fire attacks, Court to consider that the difference be- anger published re- storm” prosecution of tween the first and second of this *48 action to the first reversal because is a “difference without judicial willingness to enforce the the Defendant court’s * * * “actual Wyoming. distinction” and that the of the state of Constitution rence; State, (Wyo.1981); P.2d Cook v. 631 5 State, Speedy (Wyo.1981); U.S.C.A. 3161- § Trial Act of 1974. 18 P.2d 168 Robinson v. 627 State, (Wyo.1979). P.2d 464 Chemiwchan v. 594 104, J., Urbigkit, special- Harvey, 774 P.2d at State, 77, Cf. (Wyo. Despain P.2d 24. See v. 774 86 ly concurring. 1989), judge majority special concur- three 1126 “accused” of con- Appellant freedom has been upon Appellant’s

restraints” liberties, by kidnap conspiracy his incarcera- and to com- spiracy measured and bail, tion, of his and the way” the conditions “in mit sexual assault some since public under which 5,1986, accusation constant January upon his initial arrest on supra, standard was 463], Supreme Court al prets, ing what Marion, S.Ct. application arrested date on which North Lovasco, v. 12-2.2(a) of States Loud tion Standards of MacDonald, 414 U.S. L.Ed.2d 205 U.S. (1971); poignant United States 88 L.Ed.2d 640 ed (1973); throughout 71 L.Ed.2d 696 L.Ed.2d decision which can he has been side of this the state The Sixth cused shall “In all criminal Florida, some protection States, leading 18 L.Ed.2d 1 30 L.Ed.2d 307, [at] Hawk, public 26 L.Ed.2d Constitution Carolina, 386 U.S. Barker have been committed ...” way 752 shall United States 25, supra, 431 U.S. currently appears as 92 Speedy when 423 U.S. and district wherein the crime supra; these argument. the American “held (1977); Dillingham living, 94 S.Ct. becomes an ‘accused’.” trial, by Amendment 456 474 (1975); case enjoy S.Ct. begins expressly 30 L.Ed.2d held that the constitution- v. Wingo, (1982); (1986); [at] the accused is [at] “the U.S. U.S. four 783, Criminal be mustered Trial Clause prosecutions, have [398 26] 455, provides: 320-321 64, 188, 38 L.Ed.2d 183 Moore answer.” no later putative U.S. [at] 302, years United States 1, 97 S.Ct. United States United States impartial United States 96 v. adopted by been continuous (Note 12). 30 L.Ed.2d Supreme Court 102 S.Ct. supra; Dickey to the United [at] 106 S.Ct. Bar Marion, S.Ct. v. Justice, under [92 Klopfer defendant 474 inter- than the Standard Arizona, by Associa- Marion, 2044, 87 S.Ct. to have v. Unit- 90 S.Ct. initially ac- the 303, jury either every 1497, This 648, Cit- 404 468 at 46 52 v. v. v. v. v. pra, Strunk at 474 the same supra, 404 U.S. at 312 joined in the same indictment or informa- accused, acy sal tion reversed L.Ed.2d [at cused where the Defendant was States v. (1975); and ed as a sory on the substantive simultaneously tion Marion initial without untarily by lant is 105 a case where plaint tially Affidavit lays caused (Wyo.1986). case with reasonable and fenses. the Criminal charges This is not Ball investigate clearly charges after 439], second arrest (Wyo.1988). allowing S.Ct. aiding identical to charges complaining v. United Iannelli v. United v. prejudice to or That Nor is this MacDonald, supra. tried and convicted on principal, charges tried bars kidnapping Story supporting [774] Schultz and Probable Cause Nor is a Complaint is clear the circumstances of the conspiracy charges have been dismissed vol- on both the Government’s failure State case wherein this Court. v. government 84 L.Ed.2d 770 having Rather, abetting in P.2d [1973]). (Harvey States, and then State, State from it a principal refile, v. Appellant first or from the and sexual assault pre-indictment offenses, [92 [at] affidavit. charges, diligence, State, and 412 U.S. at case where the this [at 721 P.2d 1020 S.Ct. as in arrested, ac- Marion, 98, There first States, That rearrested, generating supporting the Appel- State, 2263], these 751 P.2d bringing fact that is essen- conspir- at convict- proceed such as convic- United a case rever- acces- order, as * 459], [740] were com- su- * * de- no of- precedent opinions the United to Mar- specific reference State, supra, Court or the common States ion decision in ([Wyo.] Phillips at 474 [774] 1989). P.2d [at] [774] (Note P.2d 7), cumstances, law of conspiracy charges probably for a second because such under these cir- prosecution

H27 transparent ties, hand, and unconscionable effort to on the other upon are based Speedy equal protection, circumvent the Trial Clause process was due and stan- previously precluded by and unthinkable dards involved within established order for jeopardy process due society provided double consid- our in the state and feder- erations. al constitutions. my opinion, In proper justification for V. DOUBLE JEOPARDY prosecution Harvey by second this es- I will subject greater address this de cape speedy from trial criteria does not in subsequently published tail dissent for Barker, precedent

find Phillips v. (Wyo. P.2d 1062 2182, Harvey, Phillips, 774 P.2d 87 or 1992), but within the seemingly unlimited just 774 P.2d 118. This court utilizes se- precedent25 provided by jeopardy double quential prosecution prose- to follow failed concepts sequential confined to prosecu attempt properly cution to now convict tions, I would find this court now takes principal charge on the with identical case both inadvisable and path undesirable orig- facts and events redefined from those way. inally stated to the differentiated inchoate Thus, conspiracy. offense of this court Wyoming now not politi- follows the way by disingenuous finds a redefinition to cized restructuring of the United States speedy amend remove trial —as well as Supreme Court, re-conceptualizes but also jeopardy protections double in- Wyoming provision pro- constitutional —out tentionally Wyoming written into Con- viding jeopardy preclusion, a double Wyo. Const, years ago. stitution more than 100 art. to authenticate a second § prosecution after respon- absolved criminal presents opportunity This case an ideal sibility principal for commission of a of- apply plain meaning, Allied-Signal, Inc. using exactly fense the same evidence and Wyoming Equalization, Bd. State involving exactly the same course of con- (Wyo.1991), purpose, 813 P.2d 214 and clear duct. commensurately pro- We reduce the Co., Zancanelli v. Central & Coal Coke scope tective Constitution Wyo. P. require jeopardy protection protec- double —such provides what the constitution —a proudly heritage tion once included in our trial. like Just constitutional amendment many in the law for centuries more than inattention, by legislative cannot occur perhaps twenty this nation has existed and Rocky Mountain Oil and Gas Ass’n v. lifespan Wyoming’s times the statehood. Equalization, State Bd. 749 P.2d 221 Consequently, I dissent on this issue also. (Wyo.1987), it should not occur either judicially politicized subjective fear or dis- duplicative order to authenticate this thoughtful prosecution in Harvey dain. Our efforts for his involvement Phillips surely alleged attempted kidnapping rape I should demand this persons, majority much. Authoritarian and totalitarian with two other governments provide squeezes jeopardy far more efficient out and denies double systems protection societal retribution under the United obtain both States sovereign an individual. Democratic socie- Constitution and that of our authority conspiracy prosecutions overlaying 25. The for current United States con- tion to each jeopardy stitutional examination of double separated prosecution other or from the first sequential prosecution is centered around Gra- principal offense involved in the contended Corbin, dy v. conspiracy. Corbin has since been cited in which, incidentally, L.Ed.2d 548 cases, many other federal court several of which opinion about the last authored Justice Wil- remanded, have been reversed when involv- Brennan, Supreme liam Jr. for the United States ing conspiracy continuing criminal enter- subsequent Court. Its five-to-four status and the change Furthermore, prise-type charges. since membership on the United States applied Corbin has been considered or in some Supreme lucidly portrayed expansive- state fashion in all but about fourteen of the occurring. Recog- ness of involvement since systems. Westlaw search reveals 164 A subsequent opinions nized to some extent in five federal cases and 282 state cases in which the applica- of the United States Court is Corbin case is cited. sequential prosecu- tion of the Corbin thesis of *50 1128 always analysis subsequent attacks the state will thoughtful of his-

state. After a charge addressed can be jeopardy, properly be another criminal torical double my persua- sequential prosecution, it is the adduced from same transactional situa efforts, majority fails both sion the the of one tion. This is nexus continued Wyoming certainly regarding the Con- Johnson, but People v. 5 Cal. transaction. Cf. Fred Blume must be stitution. Justice 552, (1992), App. Cal.Rptr.2d 7 4th 23 grave this cavalier turning in his from over jeopardy implicated, where double is Wyoming from the Con- reduction of but, instead, felony murder con- considered which, meant philosophy, as a so stitution nexity.26 development much to him and his sense case, In the initial used this affidavit protection of an identified and prosecution the second was identical with jurisprudence. investigating the the sworn statements of First, as a Blockburger terms fiction prosecution officer used to commence num- multiple prosecutions, will ac justify one, Harvey I. presented ber The evidence conspiracy continuing cept that CCE— Harvey essentially at the II iden- trial was enterprise federal forums con —in the except singular tical for the inclusion offense from cate stitute different evi- second time around of the allocution offenses, (in case, degree first gorical this dence from Identical conduct of I. ancillary rape kidnapping, and or the and participants was addressed the same aiding equally punishable satellites of and witnesses. This was conduct that consti- fact, abetting, accessory before tutes an offense for which defendant fact). accessory Blockburger v. after Corbin, prosecuted. Grady had been 180, States, 299, 508, 2084, 110 495 S.Ct. 109 L.Ed.2d U.S. (1932). Clearly, the circum 76 L.Ed. 306 548 sequentially a different crime is stance that jeopardy preclu- What does double charged in itself considered to cannot really protec- mean as sion a constitutional every In case with denied determinative. punish tion derived from millennium old circum- presumed guilt or in insufficient legal heritage?27 I continue foray, the second and stance of our ment within a first 27. A to create priate conceptual cient George C. Search ble nn. 8 and 9 cessive Prosecutions alize a The date of the Demosthenes Policy L.Ed.2d 707] dy, constitutional ardy mosthenes 589 (Rehnquist, double 8 stated that 'the Whalenv. United be tried twice on [100 If the connection "Historians jeopardy environs should be succinct, yet complete, analysis of the an- origin B.C., S.Ct. years felony back to felony jeopardy clause (1969) (tracing Thomas, III, Development M. Definition, 71 Iowa L.Rev. and the (1986): old. See also Benton into a connection with homicide Friedland, J., dissenting) have traced the double murder, guarantee against (J. analysis laws forbid the same man to the same issue days Vance trans. 4th is principle underlying [89 sufficient J. jeopardy The Prohibition 63 L.Ed.2d of a it is likewise the Same Offense: Double Sigler, the roots is, [445] Demosthenes, recognize therefore, Legal (quoting Double origins Jeopardy 16 n. to transaction- quotation was produced. double provided 715] and Social ed. Maryland, that dou- 323, at least Jeopar of our 1970)). appro- (1980) prohi jeop who Suc- 325 De of double form, but it also finds at Pieces the punishment was sufficient survived trans. 4th. erlands, Poland, times.”); McKay, Hebrew law. Bartkus the Dark Soviet Union. 94], the common ages (Black, Dark Justinian”); Gilday ing same ardy, Yale L.J. bition to Greek and Roman can be traced back dering N.Ky.L.Rev. (1983) (quoting I Demosthenes that it “found final 152 [79 Not 3 & n. Greek and Roman —from Ages, Through J., S.Ct. nations as diverse 6. In modern Ages ("The conclusion.) dissenting); does the jeopardy ed. Puzzle?, Washburn L.J. the Constitutional 245, law ..."; Id. 1970)); expression in idea that deep Mandates Hungary, Norway, 245 Double expression in & principle find Comment, 23 141-49 Gillen, into law, 262 n. 1 England, J. (1979) literally through the 3 L.Ed.2d 684] Comment, times, recognized, Illinois, Sigler, supra one Jeopardy: Greek see Jeopardy [79 Japan, early law Convention, ("Its Twice In trial and supra (1965) (reach 589 Maneuvers, through prohibition expression canon and 5 N.Y.L.F. the Neth (J. evolution in some Digest —Mean through Are at 687- note Roman note stating Vance Jeop one 9 6

H29 persuasion in the du- subsequent prosecution identical as stated any of addi- of, prosecution plicative Duffy cases upon tional offense based the same con- State, (Wyo.1990) Duffy 789 P.2d 821 duct or episode. the same criminal A State, (Wyo.1986), 730 P.2d as well may plea guilty defendant enter a of or sequential prosecution as the of case Eath nolo contendere on the plea basis of a (Wyo.1988), erton v. 761 P.2d 91 agreement in prosecuting which the at- (Wyo.1991). remand 810 P.2d 93 The resi torney agreed dismissal, agreed to seek justification in lience of reason and histori dismissal, not to oppose agreed or not to cal constitutional law satisfies me that we prosecution initiate of other offenses adopt apply should II ABA Standards upon upon based the same conduct or (1980): for Criminal Justice 13-2.3 episode. same criminal join Standard 13-2.3. Failure to certain commentary of that scholarly effort offenses purpose makes clear that the essential is to (a) When defendant has been confine proceedings alternative into a sin- charged with two or more related of- gle prosecution: jurisdiction fenses which are within the prohibits subsequent standard court, timely of the same defense mo- prosecution of offenses that are based join tion to the offenses trial for should upon the same upon conduct or the same granted be the court unless determines episode criminal as the first offense but that, prosecuting attorney because the charged that are not at the time of the does not have sufficient evidence to war- compan- of the first offense. If the trying rant some of the offenses at that prior ion offenses are filed to the first time, reason, or for some other the ends trial, subsequent prosecution prop- justice of would be defeated if the motion er either because the defendant made a granted part. were or in whole * * * denied, join motion to which was (b) A defendant’s failure to move for protection because the defendant waived

joinder any right constitutes a waiver of * * * against subsequent prosecutions joinder as to “same conduct” or “sin- by failing joinder. move gle episode” offenses which the charged. defendant knew had been at Id. 13.27. (c) A defendant who has been tried for specifi- The direction I would take is also may one offense thereafter move to dis- cally charted the American Law Insti- upon miss additional offense based adopted tute and has in- also been the same conduct or the same criminal creasing regularity by systems state court episode, joinder unless a motion for judicial some distinction to the federal denied, previously these offenses were system proclivity multiple prosecutions. joinder unless the was waived (1985) origi- The A.L.I. Model Penal Code (b), pursuant paragraph or unless the nally adopted meeting in the 1962annual jurisdic- offenses are not within the two the American Institute and now cur- Law tion of the same court. The motion to text, rently presented provides: in the 1985 prior dismiss must made be same Section 1.07. Method of Prosecution court. The motion dismiss must be More Than When Conduct Constitutes trial, prior made to the second and should One Offense. granted unless court determines Multiple Prosecution for Offenses: that, prosecuting attorney because the When the Limitation Convictions. did not have sufficient evidence to war- may same conduct of a defendant estab- trying rant the additional offense at the one lish the commission more than trial, or time of the first for some other offense, may prose- the defendant reason, justice ends would be de- He cuted for each such offense. granted feated if the motion were however, not, than be convicted of more part.

whole or in one offense if: (d) plea Entry guilty of a or nolo contendere to one offense does not bar [*] [*] [*] [*] [*] [*] (b) ming pre- deletion of the offense consists of a Constitution for one protection against jeopardy. double clusive prepara- other form of conspiracy or tion commit the other[.] any multi-participant course of con Since 1.07, conceptually possible prose- duct Id. at art. involves § conspiracy, Wyo.Stat. contention cutorial crimes, its section inchoate *52 6-1-303; solicitation, Wyo.Stat. 6-1- § § recognizes American Law Institute then 302; 6-1-301; attempt, Wyo.Stat. acces § involved, separate single if a crime is a that fact, sory Wyo.Stat. the 6-1-201 before § for additional crime sentencing process fact, (1988); accessory Wyo.Stat. after the i.e., unjustified, when the conspiracy of is (1988); and, addition, in 6-5-202 commis § go agreement beyond does not preliminary sion an actual as in of offense offenses consummation, conviction and double case, attempt, Wyo. this sexual assault or 1 Model A.L.I. Penal sentence are barred. (1988), conceptually 6-2-203 we Stat. § 1, Commentaries, 1.07, and Pt. at Code § segment any one course of conduct into (1985). This is unchartered or 110 not an potentiality sequential prosecutions. of six Goldstein, recognition. novel Abraham S. system partici our court nor the Neither Conspiracy to the United Defraud officials, pants political lawyers, therein — (1959). 68 Yale 405 The direction tak- L.J. judicial so officials or victims —should be by the is if en American Law Institute that exposed. jeopar broadly Historical double conspiracy completed into a matures dy applied past generally was not times co-conspirator is convicted of crime and the unprotective with an shield with such and crime, duplicate there will be no crimes Eather See many so indiscriminate leaks. single punishment for the com- ton, Duffy, 730 P.2d 91 and P.2d 754. 761 mission of one actual criminal offense. of the Fifth Amendment of application In concept further find the to be would Constitution, of United States same arrange the differentiated consistent with jeopardy preclusion, fense it is rec double provided Wyo.Stat. ment 6-1-301 § ognized regard for Corbin —without (1988) through accord 6-1-304 § Nowack v. (Wyo.1989) P.2d 561 774 increasing an of states with number adaptation have been decisive —should “barring specific statutes conviction for Now, jeopardy how double resolution. an included offense.” This offense and — Felix, ever, U.S.-, United States v. conspiracy completed includes unless the 1377, 118 112 L.Ed.2d 25 overt S.Ct. pursuant conspir offense committed ly extrapolating conspir has relevance in objective acy conspir that the shows protective in acy jeopardy double from a acy in addi was a commission of offenses sequential prosecution. In tervention for tion of for which the defendant was of life dis some distillation real events —as 1 Penal convicted. See A.L.I. Model Code tinguished adjudicatory from fictionalized supra, Commentaries, A perti at 109. Wyo conceptions refuse to redefine the —I Illinois, provided by example nent where ming equivalently closed Constitution to be of the defendant cannot be convicted both Felix, course, brought included down. People principal offense. inchoate Corbin conspiracy out of the course 459, Ill.App.3d Whaley, 184 132 Ill.Dec. II, find the same conduct. we (1989); People v. At 681, 540 421 N.E.2d be, sequential prosecution, conduct kins, 600, 463, Ill.App.3d 113 Ill.Dec. 161 de for same twice used conviction Walker, People v. (1987); straight 515 N.E.2d line I would follow a fendant. Ill.2d 50 Ill.Dec. 419 N.E.2d adopt cur pathway and not this historical Felix, cert. denied (1981), rent detour. S.Ct. pigeonhole (1984). Stevens, J., concurring part L.Ed.2d 697 Con S.Ct. Corbin, rule, versely, applied by “conspiracy” concurring judgment; this Vitale, conviction, Illinois v. 2084; majority to assure reaches U.S. 410, 100 panorama encompass S.Ct. L.Ed.2d further to the whole Oklahoma, (1980); Harris Additionally, offenses. the de of inchoate 53 L.Ed.2d 1054 Wyo largely cision amend serves

H31 Ohio, Eatherton, Brown See however 761 P.2d (1977).28 91.29 principle frailty double I would continue to believe what Justice portends jeopardy prohibition today, if still Powell in writing said for the majority in part see Brown, very society, fabric our 432 U.S. at 97 S.Ct. at 2226: generally George C. Thomas, III, The Pro- greater offense therefore defi- hibition Successive Prosecutions nition the purposes “same” for of double the Same In Search Offense: of Defini- jeopardy lesser offense included tion, 71 Iowa L.Rev. 323 is now in it. present most form perhaps tattered This merely conclusion restates what almost unusable. has understanding been this Court’s sequential prosecutions conspir With the Double Jeopardy Clause at least *53 acy when prosecute prin efforts to for the since In re Nielsen was decided in 1889. floundered, cipal super offense have we In that case the endorsed the rule sede and essentially disembowel collateral that Ashe v. Swen estoppel in jeopardy, double person “where ... a has been tried sen, 436, 1189, 397 U.S. 90 S.Ct. 25 L.Ed.2d convicted for crime which has (1970), process 469 and due remonstration it, various included in incidents he can- against dry the failed run. Tibbs first-time not be a second tried time for one of Florida, 31, v. 2211, 102 457 U.S. S.Ct. 72 those being put incidents without twice Corbin, (1982). See also L.Ed.2d 652 495 jeopardy the for same offence.” 2084; Vitale, 508, U.S. 110 S.Ct. 447 U.S. 672, [176], 676, 131 U.S. 188 at S.Ct. [9 Brown, 410, 2260; 161, 100 S.Ct. 432 U.S. (1889)]. 33 L.Ed. 118 Jorn, States 2221; v. 97 S.Ct. 400 Although in this formulation the convic- 470, 547, U.S. 91 27 S.Ct. L.Ed.2d 543 precedes greater tion of the the convic- (1971); Maryland, Benton v. 784, 395 U.S. lesser, opinion tion o the the makes it 2056, (1969); 89 S.Ct. Green clear that sequence the is immaterial. States, v. United 184, 355 U.S. parte 221, 2 Lange, Ex Similarly, agree I L.Ed.2d 199 with Justice Brennan in 163, 163, 18 Wall. 21 85 U.S. L.Ed. 872 concurrence: sequential prosecution 28. The volume of Corbin stated that "the laws forbid same man to issue_” publication case law since its 1990 date is as- be tried same twice on the 1 De- tounding. scope prev- The broad reveals the trans., (J. 1970). mosthenes 4th ed. 589 Vince re-prosecution society alence of efforts in our however, Despite antiquity, its roots in this essentially where the first effort was deemed guarantee one seems both of the least under- Felix, unsatisfying. prosecutorially conversely, and, years, stood in recent one of the most period, at least in has this brief not been direct- frequently litigated provisions of the Bill of ly adopted by any reported state decision within Rights. done little to This Court has alleviate brightline conspiracy precept its that is excluded confusion, opinions, including and our jeopardy protection. from relevance in double me, replete ones authored are with mea believe, recently by I continue to as restated our assumptions culpa’s by shifts occasioned Idaho, Wheaton, v. sister state of ho specially concurring State 121 Ida- e.g., emphasis. Compare United States v. 404, 501, Bistline, J., (1992), 506 825 P.2d Jenkins, 420 S.Ct. [95 U.S. 358 43 Lang, (quoting State v. 105 (1975), with United L.Ed.2d Scott, States v. 250] (1983)): "[Tjhis Idaho 672 P.2d S.Ct. 437 U.S. 82 57 L.Ed.2d [98 Court need not be orbiting satellite in the 'a eccentric ” Jenkins). (1978) (overruling See also 65] States the [United Court].’ States, Robinson, Burks v. United 437 U.S. S.Ct. Comment, [98 Grady See also Paul R. (Our (1978) holdings 57 L.Ed.2d Analysis 1] Solidifying Jeop- Corbin: Double subject hardly be ardy, EngJ. "can characterized as 17 New on Crim. & Civ. Confine- consistency clarity”). ment models of Al- step though today’s takes a decision tentative Rehnquist’s I find Justice dissent in Whalen recognizing toward believe to be the what 699-700, v. United S.Ct. determining proper role for this Court 1432, 1441-42, (1980) L.Ed.2d 715 to be sin- multiple punishments, permissibility it ulti- gularly relevant: mately compounds the confusion that has origins Historians have traced of our jeopardy plagued area. us in the double guarantee against jeop- constitutional ardy double Demosthenes, days of back to the who liberty essary to of the citizen in a I adhere to the view that the Double ours, government the Fifth Amend- Jeopardy frequently Clause of like so sub- ment, through applied ject popular States changes feeling Amendment, requires sentiment, Fourteenth introducing design except prosecution proceeding, one ques- our the clause in into Constitution extremely circumstances not limited tion.” here, present charges of “all the Lange, Ex U.S. 170-71. parte single grow out of defendant I could also find some relevance to be act, occurrence, episode, provided by own case of our Swenson, transaction.” Ashe Wyo. 227, Keefe, 98 P. 122 State n. 7 453-454 and [90 provided issues of double (1970) (Brennan, J., 1199-1200 and n. 7] term, jeopardy, though not stated concurring). Thompson v. Okla- See Keefe, originally charged trial. homa, [97 one, murders, was tried two (Brennan, J., L.Ed.2d dissent- 770] guilty manslaughter, sen- found ing certiorari), denial of and cases from penitentiary where he was tenced collected therein. immediately Upon release from taken. Brown, 432 U.S. at S.Ct. at 2228. service, he was then re-arrested for Certainly, Blockburger, 284 anticipated prosecution second *54 inapposite is not since it does not S.Ct. 180 concurrently charged second murder. prosecutions in its sequential refer to delin: differentiating Recognizing the factor that separate single eation of crimes within a “potential” initially crimes both were only sidestep prosecution. speedy We not Keefe, given in charged in the consideration protections trial once af- constitutional sequential prosecution per- has denied case, by this court in this but now firmed analytical validity. suasive part proceedings of the first factual use questions clearly here are reserved [T]he grant opportunity and to the state constitutional, they the for involve consti- strategies perfectf its trial and its “hon[e] ] right in a tutional of an accused through attempts successive at evidence [a trial, prosecution right to a Tibbs, 41, 457 U.S. conviction.” valid] claimed have been violated in this 102 at 2218. v. S.Ct. See also Greene supplements The case. statute the con- 2151, 19, 98 437 U.S. 57 Massey, provision pro- stitutional secures or and (1978) L.Ed.2d 15 and Burks v. United securing right for vides a method 1, 2141, States, 437 U.S. 98 S.Ct. 57 regarded thereby It is to as declared. (1978). 1 L.Ed.2d purpose rendering enacted case In the of The Commonwealth v. effective, guaranty and as constitutional Littell, Olds, one of best [5 137] legislative of what is and declaration judges law that ever sat common not, what under the circumstances Appeals of Ken- bench Court named, in proper delay a reasonable and remarked, tucky every person “that ac- respect bringing accused govern- quainted history of with the constitutional aforesaid. trials have ments must know state uniformly hold that such stat- authorities engine employed as a formidable been purpose for the of en- utes are enacted of a dominant administra- hands forcing right, and that constitutional To mischief the prevent tion.... legislative construction they constitute a law, Magna as as ancient common well provi- or definition of the constitutional itself, provided acquittal that one Charta incorporated provision most sion—a law; or, satisfy or conviction should as as well the state constitutions words, the accused should other States. constitution of the United right secured to him of always have the II 98 P. 122. differs pleas Id. at

availing himself autrefois conspiracy from perpet- To acquit and convict. Keefe autrefois later use” rule, charge was “laid back for wise so favorable nec- uate this

H33 opposed in Against charging simultaneous Successive Criminal Prosecu- tions, 19 (1972). UCLA L.Rev. 804 See Keefe. also The Term, 1989 transactional test 104 Wyo structure of ming law was well established since Harv.L.Rev. 149 before statehood until State v. Car redirected I would also follow the precepts broad ter, However, 714 P.2d (Wyo.1986). 1217 Corbin, 110 S.Ct. 2084. See precedent fail to find in that recent recon- Felix, 112 Stevens, J., S.Ct. at concur ceptualization to jeopardy demolish double ring part and concurring in judg protection in sequential prosecutions by a ment, as well as the origi rational direction process pigeonhole adaptation law nally provided by United States v. Calder conspiracy provided as now in this case. one, (2d Cir.1990), 917 F.2d 717 grant cert. initially Phillips See Territory, Wyo. 1 — ed judgment vacated -, (1872), included, 82 greater inclusive; lesser (1992) (now L.Ed.2d 381 State, Brown Wyo. 259 P. 810 remanded the United (1927), Surpeme States duplicated prosecution for manufac Gambino, Court in States v. turing possession; State similarly — Williams, (2d Cir.1990), Wyo. F.2d 1108 cert. denied 266 P. 1056 Tobin, State v. Wyo. -, 226 P. U.S. 112 S.Ct. (1924), conducting or permitting as granted cert. judgment vacat — steps stages affair; in the same ed -, then group of cases cited in dissent in L.Ed.2d 381 and not saw a hole into Carter, J., Urbigkit, P.2d at dis the constitutional jeopardy protec double State, senting. See also Dorador v. Wyo.Const. tion of art. 11 to allow § State, (Wyo.1974); P.2d 230 Jackson v. subsequent prosecution for conspiracy or Boyd v. (Wyo.1974); P.2d 1286 any other statutorily-provided Wyoming in P.2d cert. denied (Wyo.1974), *55 offenses). See Wyo.Stat. 6, choate Title 137, 96 (1975); 46 L.Ed.2d 102 art. 3. No doubt exists about the same State, and Jerskey v. (Wyo. 546 P.2d 173 transactional events —the same conduct 1976). proved nearly was identical form in both Conspiracy in mechanical evolution was cases. amplified by This fact is use of the transactional within the events resulting in allocution statement from the first trial for the committed criminal offense. It can evidence in the second trial. The direction stage completed be a occurrence provided in decisively per state cases is proof if of the occurrence inis fact identi- Quinton suasive for me. These include: v. proof cal with the initiating of the activities Superior Court State In and For of perpetrators.30 case, In this Mohave, County 168 Ariz. P.2d 815 conduct identically proved. — (1991), cert. denied U.S.-, events were prose- transitional. The first (1992); State v. 117 L.Ed.2d 518 unsuccessfully cution directed itself to the Hope, 215 Conn. (1990), A.2d 1000 penal assessment of retribution for assert- — cert. denied -, illegal ed conduct. I apply would historical State, (1991); Dixon v. concepts jeopardy of double and confine Harrelson v. (Fla.App.1991); 584 So.2d 195 prosecutorial require efforts to success in a State, (Miss.1990); State v. 569 So.2d 295 See try. Wyo.Const. one-time art. 11. § Woodfork, 239 Neb. N.W.2d See also Donald Eric Burton, Note, A Clos- (1991); Harrington, State Neb. er Look at the Court and the State, Jivers 461 N.W.2d 752 Clause, Jeopardy Double 49 Ohio St.L.J. Head, State v. (S.C.1991); S.E.2d 154 Brown, and Richard A. Com- (S.D.1991); v. La ment, Jeopardy The Double State N.W.2d 585 Clause: Re- viollette, fining Proscription the Constitutional Wash.App. 805 P.2d 253 Conspiracy comparability deny- drugs evolutionary campaigns accrues for hinderance to ing protections designer constitutional as do to eliminate substance abuse. concepts my 826 P.2d 684 in attention to constitutional 118 Wash.2d aff'd (1992).31 individuals, protection I cannot of all exception essentially for make what pre- I would on the basis of the reverse past justice delivery were mistakes of Wyo.Const. art. clusive limitations under If I system. am to make the deliberative jeopardy. 11—double § taking path now out of easy decision present problems, how then can I build VI. CONCLUSION for future that assurance our law Wyoming The five of the Su- members similarly not then ex- reoccurrence will preme charged individually and Court are accepted? plained, excused or collectively re- with a basic constitutional my opinion, Jetty Lee Harvey was not obey sponsibility support, to and defend the properly conspiracy convicted of commit to Wyoming Additionally, we Constitution. kidnapping within our constitutional stan- serve as the architects of law justice. Consequently, in unwill- dard future. determine build What we will ingness accept to takes pathway or demolish structure the law within result, approve respect- I can, present us to grandchildren which our children and fully dissent. time, good comfortably in their reside or divisively only exist. easy This case neither nor comfortable GOLDEN, Justice, concurring part century I contemplate for me as the next dissenting part. guarantee then and whether our law will parts opinion I concur in those allocution, right access to a fair and relating jeopardy, the issues double jury, availability speedy disinterested of a trial, (change pretrial publicity protection trial and some double venue). dissent, however, respectfully I jeopardy. part opinion relative necessarily reject write dissent not testimony. use of allocution me, way easy but rather to out I have reservations whether the identify my under- concern basic constitutionally protected, al- allocution standing about what our constitution said, though this court has in obiter dic- protect why for and it should all and stands tum, Christy it is. P.2d just delay in a some. The character of (Wyo.1987). In this court Christy, proceeding which occurred in this *56 legal authority no cited no and offered simply reoccur time in case will not explanation support prop- cogent of that any place near the the future under A implicitly states have ele- osition. few to- Wyoming judiciary

current it exists the level a constitu- vated allocution to of See, 24, day. example, the 1992 March right, although allocution has tional trial, 48(b), speedy rule on W.R.Cr.P. regarded system, in the or so federal been which, future, permit could only majority the of states. Arthur W. See responsibility delay if the character 246, Sentencing, Campbell, Law 9.5 at § by the assessed and taken Chief Justice (2d 1991), accompanying nn. 52-53 ed. Wyoming Supreme Court. the text. upon general The issue which members stage research, I more genuinely my differ At this am of this court is whether agree to past problems prospectively should inclined said State 344, Saari, like 152 568 351 persons without to Vt. A.2d resolved benefit exist, Legitimate arguments (1989): Harvey. but application presents Blockburger acquittal of collateral II neither function as

31. the Ashe, estoppel 90 exception for or established after-discovered later-occurred events, Tolbert, Bolinger, 796 United States v. see State v. Ohio St.3d S.Ct. Cf. — U.S.-, Cir.1986), (11th cert. denied cert. denied F.2d N.E.2d 100 L.Ed.2d nor whether L.Ed.2d (1988). will now the same reversal for serve

H35 allocution, principle gives rity The which justice system. of the criminal When opportunity defendants in our courts suppression hearing process has served prior sentencing, purposes, parties address the bench those return to the field, playing tradition of the common law which having level neither side developed penalty gained when death was the advantage an unfair as a result of felony process. convictions and the accused the testify. often was not allowed to 3 W. Further, I would note that the context Israel, LaPave & J. Criminal Procedure plea agreement of the process, plea if the 25.1(f) (1984). § agreement fails, evidence of the accused’s also, Barrett, Allocution, See Paul W. relating statement plea to the failed is inad (1944). Mo.L.Rev. 115-24 guilt missible on the crucial issue of or Wyo.R.Crim.P. 15(e)(6). innocence. Wyoming’s statutory recognition of allo- primary purposes plea agreement Wyo.Sess.Laws cution can be traced from process promote XIII, 158-60, are to title ch. conservation of pp. 495- §§ justice Wyo.Stat. resources and to through 7-268 ensure §§ (1957). rights that the accused’s preserved protect This court allocution in have been Wyo.R.Crim.P. 33(a)(i), ed. Ill ABA superseded Standards For Criminal Jus tice, 14-3.1, (2d statutory provisions. p. 1986); the 1957 14.68 ed. Santo York, 257, 260-61, bello v. New Having my stated reservations about the 495, 497-98, 30 L.Ed.2d allocution, constitutional derivation of plea agreement fails, If the turn to the specific heart of the issue at parties field, return to the playing level purpose right hand. The sole of the having gained neither side an unfair advan today allocution is to afford convicted tage process. as a result of the opportunity defendant the to effect the tri- sentencing al foregoing court’s decision. As con- These instances in which the law, developed ceived in the testimony, common under accused’s justice as a criminal statutory recognition, practiced matter, today policy is declared inadmissible on rules, plays innocence, under court question guilt allocution no role the crucial or guilt-determination stage legitimate, of the trial. in order that a more immediate guilt stage served, Unlike the purpose may appear determination of the useful in trial, in presentation resolving question. which the focus is the pri- the issue relating guilt mary purpose sentencing process of evidence to the accused’s innocence, phase punishment upon the allocution to determine based sentencing stage presenta- principles pre- focuses on the humane of reformation and relating imposition pur- tion of information Wyo.Const. of vention. art. 15. The § punishment person pose process on a convicted who no of allocution in that is to defendant, longer enjoying presump- provide is an accused he the convicted before tion of innocence. or she is advised the court of the appeal, opportunity to effect *57 considering hand, the issue at I note allocution, sentencing decision. After suppression hearing that in the context of a court decides and declares the sentence. guilt stage, any determination testi- that, After the court informs sentenced mony during of the accused the course of right appeal. If con- convict of the process on the crucial inadmissible appeal and sentence are reversed on viction guilt issue of or innocence. Simmons v. again put jeopar- once in the defendant dy, why parties not the return to should generally, and see field, having neither side playing the level LaFave, Wayne R. Search and Seizure gained advantage unfair as a result of 11.2(d), (2d 1987). at 240-42 ed. § process? purposes suppression primary hear- justice system is built on ing prosecution are to deter Our criminal misconduct pride our- gathering promote concept of fairness. We of evidence and to participants integ- having informed all public preserve selves on confidenc^in sys- our ground rules in advance what surprise system abhors operates;

tem find no fairness I can

and ambush. Harvey as result of Mr. happened to

what only I see sur-

his allocution statement. sentencing court

prise and ambush. he anything said him that

did not warn against him be used

allocution would fact, it was prosecution; Harvey made his statement

after Mr. him his sentencing judge informed which, on appeal the conviction I before, he had been sentenced.

moments Mr. made to find that

am unable intelligent, and informed waiver

knowing, right to remain silent.

of his any allocution testimo- hold would defendant is inadmissi-

ny of the convicted guilt or innocence question on the

ble and sentence are the conviction

the event defendant is appeal and that

reversed in- conduct

again put jeopardy gave rise in the transaction

volved prosecution.

the first Harvey’s Mr. conviction

I would reverse remand for retrial. ground

on this (Petitioner), PISANO, Appellant

George SHILLINGER, Appellee

Duane

(Respondent).

No. 91-138. Wyoming.

July

Case Details

Case Name: Harvey v. State
Court Name: Wyoming Supreme Court
Date Published: Jun 11, 1992
Citation: 835 P.2d 1074
Docket Number: 90-113
Court Abbreviation: Wyo.
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