Lawrence S. Bittaker was convicted in a California court on a charge of burglary some four years before
Faretta v. California,
While the parties have briefed and argued the case in terms of the “retroactivity” of
Faretta,
it is not necessary to reach that question because the law of this circuit at the time of Bittaker’s state court trial had already been established in a fashion consistent with the Supreme Court’s statement of the law in
Faretta. Arnold v. United States,
There can be little doubt, however, that, if squarely faced with the issue, we would have applied the right to self-representation to a state habeas petitioner.
We had already characterized the right as a constitutional one in
Arnold v. United States,
The state emphasizes that Faretta has a somewhat different conceptual basis from our prior holdings. The Supreme Court held that the right to self-representation is implied in the structure of the Sixth Amendment. We had expressed it as a counterpart to the right to counsel.
According to the state, the conceptual distinction makes our previous cases irrelevant. We disagree. Before Faretta a state defendant in this circuit had a federal constitutional right to self-representation. After Faretta the right was the same, whether or not its rationale was expressed in the same terms. The state would have us tell Bittaker that even though he had the same right before Faretta as prisoners in other circuits have since, we must refuse relief because the Supreme Court used different words than we had used in justifying that right. We will not engage in such a verbal minuet.
Finally, the state argues that we should apply the harmless-error doctrine to denials of the right of self-representation. 2 Again, we disagree.
Before
Faretta
we had held that the defendant need not show prejudice resulting from the denial of the right.
United States v. Price,
*403
The purpose of the right is to protect the defendant’s personal autonomy, not to promote the convenience or efficiency of the trial.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Before
Faretta,
California courts denied that there was such a right.
People v. Sharp,
. The state mentions several times that one of its prisoners who may benefit from the Faretta decision is Charles Manson. We do not encourage this type of advocacy. A federal court must make its decisions in accord with the Constitution and the laws, without regard to the notoriety of parties or nonparties.
