C. Marshall, Warden of the California State Department of Corrections, and the Attorney General of the State of California appeal the district court’s issuance of the 28 U.S.C. § 2254
habeas corpus
writ for California state prisoner John Gregory Lee, who was convicted in state court of conspiracy to commit murder in 1982. The district court, in
Lee v. Marshall,
I.
In 1982, John Gregory Lee and Joe Valentine were tried on charges of murder and conspiracy to commit murder in violation of California Penal Code §§ 182, 187. During the jury deliberations, two police officers dressed in plain clothes, officers Bumpus and Jacobs, were observed by co-defense counsel exiting the jury room. 1 Neither defendant had consented to the officers’ entry, nor had it been approved by the trial judge. The officers had taken a video machine into the jury room so that a videotape of witness McKnight’s interrogation could be replayed to the jury. 2 Detective Jacobs was the investigating officer on the case, had assisted during the trial with witnesses and exhibits, and had sat at the prosecution table during portions of the trial. Officer Bumpus had set up and played the videotape in question during trial. He was otherwise not involved in the case.
No one accompanied the officers as they entered the jury room. As soon as it was known that the officers had entered the jury room, the judge and co-defense counsel questioned them under oath. Neither Lee nor his counsel were in the courtroom. Officer Jacobs testified that he had had no conversation with the jurors, and that he simply brought the machine into the jury room with Officer Bumpus, and then departed. Officer Bumpus testified that a juror had asked him how often the police had to repair their video machine. The questions and answers on this point were as follows:
THE COURT: All right. Was there any communication of any type to the jury back there, Officer Bumpus?
OFFICER BUMPUS: Yes, Your Honor. THE COURT: What was that?
OFFICER BUMPUS: One of the male jurors asked me how often we repair the machine. I stated we didn’t. He told me his was in the shop being repaired.
THE COURT: Anything else?
OFFICER JACOBS: No conversation.
THE COURT: All right. Do you want to ask them any questions?
MS. CUNNINGHAM [CO-DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Did you even say good morning?
OFFICER BUMPUS: No, ma’am.
MS. CUNNINGHAM: Was there any conversation during (sic) showing the tape?
OFFICER BUMPUS: No, ma’am.
The judge took no corrective action. The jury found Lee guilty of conspiracy to com *1298 mit murder; it failed to reach a verdict on the murder charge. Lee was sentenced to serve 27 years to life in state prison. The California Court of Appeal affirmed the judgment. Lee’s petition for writ of habeas corpus in the California Supreme Court was denied.
Lee then filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. The district court held an evidentiary hearing at which Detective Jacobs and Juror Dorothy McAl-frey testified. Juror McAlfrey testified that neither the jury nor the officers discussed the case during the officers’ presence in the jury room. 3 Finding the unauthorized presence of the officers to be a structural defect, the district court issued Lee’s writ for habeas corpus.
II.
A district court’s grant or denial of a petition for writ of
habeas corpus
is reviewed
de novo. Sanders v. Ratelle,
Constitutional errors occurring during a criminal proceeding generally fall into one of two categories: “structural defects in the constitution of the trial mechanism” and “trial errors.”
Arizona v. Fulminante,
A trial error, on the other hand, is not per se fatal — rather, it is scrutinized on direct appeal under “harmless error” analysis. Where, as here, the error is challenged collaterally, the error will be found harmless unless it is shown that the error had a “substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict,”
Brecht,
— U.S. at-,
III.
That the unauthorized entry into the jury room was an error cannot be debated. But, to hold that the officers’ intrusion so infected the entire trial process as to defy harmless error analysis would be to disregard Supreme Court authority to the contrary. The Court in
United States v. Olano,
— U.S. -,
The Court’s review of “intrusion” jurisprudence in
Olano
demonstrates that intrusion should normally be analyzed for its prejudi
*1299
cial impact upon the deliberations.
Olano,
— U.S. at -,
We recognize that
Olano
was a “plain error” case, but see no reason to depart from the Court’s explication of intrusion jurisprudence because the attack here is collateral.
Olano
held that to show a plain error affected “substantial rights,” a defendant generally must make a specific showing of prejudice.
Id.
at-,
Here, we find no hint of prejudice. The testimony officers Bumpus and Jacobs gave upon exiting the jury room revealed that their entry was innocuous, not prejudicial. 5 The record clearly shows there was no improper influence on the jury; much less that the officers’ presence had a substantial and injurious effect or influence in determining the jury’s verdict.
REVERSED.
Notes
. It is unclear precisely who directed the officers to enter the jury room. Officer Jacobs testified before the district court that "[it] most likely was the district attorney.”
. Defendant does not advance the replay of the tape itself as a basis for relief.
. When asked. Juror McAlfrey responded that nothing improper had happened while Bumpus and Jacobs were in the jury room, and said that no juror discussed the case with the officers. Not surprisingly, her testimony revealed that she recalled little of the event which had occurred some eleven years earlier.
. The Court in
Brecht
further recognized a hybrid constitutional error, where “a deliberate and especially egregious [trial error] ... might so infect the integrity of the proceeding as to warrant the grant of habeas relief, even if it did not substantially influence the jury's verdict.” Brecht, - U.S. at -,
. Although we recognize the substantial potential for prejudice from the presence of police officers in the jury room, much more so than from the presence of alternate jurors, we conclude that the critical issue is nonetheless whether there was actual prejudicial impact upon the deliberations.
