ORDER
The opinion filed September 3, 1998 is ORDERED withdrawn and the AMENDED OPINION is ORDERED filed.
The panel has voted to deny the petition for rehearing and to deny the petition for rehearing en banc.
The full court was advised of the petition for rehearing en banc and no judge of the court has requested a vote on the petition for rehearing en banc. Fed. R.App. P. 35.
The petition for rehearing and the petition for rehearing en banc are DENIED.
OPINION
The issue before the court is whether a prisoner is entitled to habeas corpus relief when he has demonstrated that he was shackled during the entire course of his trial, in violation of his constitutional rights, and the shackles were visible from the jury box.
Appellant Lawtis Donald Rhoden was convicted in state court of one count of *635 rape, in violation of Cal.Penal Code § 261(2); one count of penetration with a foreign object, in violation of Cal.Penal Code § 289(A); and one count of sexual battery, in violation of Cal.Penal Code § 243.4.
In Rhoden’s state court proceedings, the California Court of Appeal found that restraint was not required during Rhoden’s trial so that the shackling violated his constitutional rights, but that the error was harmless. In Rhoden’s federal habeas appeal, this court held that the state court incorrectly concluded that Rhoden had not been prejudiced.
See Rhoden v. Rowland,
This appeal follows that remand in which, after an evidentiary hearing, the district court found that the shackles were visible to the jury, but held that the actual prejudicial effect on the jury deliberations was insufficient to warrant habeas relief. We conclude that under controlling Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit law the writ must issue, because Rhoden’s visiblé, unconstitutional shackling prejudiced him.
See Illinois v. Allen,
BACKGROUND
The California trial court conducted a hearing outside the presence of the jury and determined that it would order Rho-den restrained during his trial. The trial court did not establish a compelling need for the shackling, or satisfy other criteria we have established for use of that extreme measure.
See Rhoden I,
Rhoden’s counsel objected to the shackles, but was overruled. To lessen the prejudicial effect of the shackles on the jury, however, Rhoden was escorted to and from the courtroom out of the jury’s presence and was instructed to keep his legs under the counsel table.
Rhoden’s direct appeal and state petition for habeas relief were combined in the California Court of Appeal. There, Rho-den moved to augment the record with a jury list in order to have access to jurors to determine whether their verdict was affected by the shackling. The California Court of Appeal ruled that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering the leg shackles, but ruled that the error was harmless because “[njothing in the record establishes that any jurors actually saw the shackles.” See id. (quoting the unpublished opinion of the California Court of Appeal).
Rhoden filed this petition for writ of habeas corpus challenging the state appellate court’s findings of fact and the conclusion of law that the shackling was not prejudicial. The petition raised eight separate claims, one of which was that he was denied the right to a fair trial because subsequent investigation revealed that at least three jurors had seen the shackles during the trial. He argued that this evidence was not available to him earlier because the California Court of Appeal had denied his motion to include the jury list in the record.
The district court dismissed the petition with prejudice and Rhoden appealed to this court. We concluded that we could not determine whether the shackling warranted habeas relief without knowing what the jurors saw. See id. at 1462. Therefore, we remanded the petition for an evi-dentiary hearing “to determine what the jurors saw and whether it was so inherently prejudicial] that it threatened the fairness of the trial.” See id.
A magistrate judge held an evidentiary hearing in which testimony was taken from *636 nine jurors, Rhoden’s state court-appointed investigator, the deputy district attorney, and a law student with the Post-Conviction Justice Project. Five jurors testified that they saw the restraints at some point during the proceedings, and that the issue of shackling was not mentioned during deliberations. The magistrate judge concluded that the shackles were visible to the jurors as they sat in the jury box, but made little actual impression on them. Therefore, the magistrate concluded that Rhoden was not inherently prejudiced by the trial court’s requirement that he remain shackled in the presence of the jury. The district court adopted his report. This timely appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
The leading Supreme Court case on shackling during trials is
Illinois v. Allen,
As the Supreme Court developed in
Holbrook v. Flynn,
Because visible shackling during trial is so likely to cause a defendant prejudice, it is permitted only when justified by an essential state interest specific to each trial.
Holbrook,
A jury’s brief or inadvertent glimpse of a defendant in physical restraints outside of the courtroom has not warranted habeas relief.
See United States v. Olano,
Similarly, when the defendant’s shackling was not actually seen by the jury during the trial, we have held that the shackling was harmless error.
See Castillo,
In
Duckett v. Godinez,
In cases like this, where the unjustified shackles were not obtrusive, but were visible and actually seen by some of the jurors, the Eleventh Circuit has also held that habeas relief was warranted.
See Elledge v. Dugger,
Due process was denied when the trial court ordered Rhoden shackled during his trial without a proper determination of the need for shackles.
See Holbrook,
Furthermore, Rhoden was charged with violent crimes and the basic issue at his trial concerned whether there was consent or whether Rhoden used force or fear to overcome his accuser’s will. The evidence on this issue was disputed and the jurors deliberated for over nine hours over three days, which suggests that they did not find the ease to be clear-cut,
Gibson v. Clanon,
The judgment of dismissal is REVERSED and the matter is REMANDED with instructions to grant the petition.
