Eleven days after a Massachusetts jury found Matthew Mahoney guilty of manslaughter, a juror sent the judge a letter suggesting that other jurors may not have confined their deliberations to the evidence presented at trial. The judge interviewed the juror privately and found beyond a reasonable doubt that no extraneous prejudicial information or improper actions occurred during the deliberations. After his conviction was affirmed on appeal, Maho-ney filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus claiming that he had been denied his Sixth Amendment right to counsel because the trial judge refused to permit his lawyer to be present at the juror interview. The district court summarily dismissed the petition. In this appeal, Mahoney claims that the court erred both in failing to grant a hearing on his petition and in failing to find a Sixth Amendment violation. We find no merit in either claim, and therefore affirm.
Discussion
The juror’s letter to the judge read in pertinent part as follows:
I also listened each day as you told us not to speak to anyone or read anything about this case. I took this as being the [l]aw ... but I’m not so sure if other jurors did.... We were told to confine our deliberations to the evidence.... I do not believe this happened. There are far too numerous things that happened to put down on paper.
After receiving the letter, the judge provided a copy to defense counsel and the prosecutor. Counsel for petitioner’s co-defendant filed a motion asking the judge either to conduct an in camera interview of the juror or to permit counsel to interview her. The judge agreed to interview the juror but refused defendant’s counsel’s request to be present. A transcript of the interview was prepared and impounded and later reviewed by the Supreme Judicial Court in connection with defendant’s appeal. The SJC described what it found as follows:
The transcript of that interview reveals a thorough and comprehensive inquiry. The juror was sworn. In response to careful questioning she indicated to the judge: (1) that some jurors discussed the merits of the case prior to the commencement of deliberations; (2) that the juror felt that she, and at least one other juror, had been “pressured” and “badger[ed]” into finding guilt because the jurors who concluded that the defendants had been proved guilty “were very stubborn” and “[tjhey weren’t going to change their minds no matter what we had to show them[;j” and (3) that some jurors were concerned about “get[ting the defendants] off the street” so they would not commit other crimes.
Commonwealth v. Mahoney,
Three well-established principles of law govern this case. First, and foremost, is the longstanding rule that courts must “protect jurors and their verdicts from unwarranted intrusions,”
Commonwealth v. Fidler,
The second relevant proposition of law is that trial judges have broad discretion in determining how to respond to allegations of extraneous influence on jurors.
United States v. Boylan,
When viewed in light of these longstanding principles, petitioner’s claim becomes transparently weak. Whether or not the vague allegations in the juror’s letter were enough to require
any
response by the trial court,
2
it is evident that her unfocused, unsworn assertions demanded no more than the preliminary inquiry that the judge agreed to conduct. The judge was responsible for shielding the jury’s deliberative process from unnecessary scrutiny, and his decision to conduct a private inquiry to determine if there was anything justifying further intrusion fell well within his discretion.
See Calbas,
Petitioner relies heavily on
Remmer v. United States,
The trial court should not decide and take final action ex parte on information such as was received in this case, but should determine the circumstances, the impact thereof upon the juror, and whether or not it was prejudicial, in a hearing with all interested parties permitted to participate.
Id.
at 229-230,
Although
Remmer
emphasizes the importance of fully exploring allegations of jury irregularities, with all parties involved, the case does not help petitioner here because of a crucial distinction in the underlying facts: unlike this case,
Remmer
dealt with a specific claim of juror bribery that
*1493
obviously warranted thorough investigation.
3
As we have said before, “[w]e have no doubt that a court must satisfactorily probe
non-frivolous
charges of jury spoilage,” Ner
on,
Petitioner’s invocation of his Sixth Amendment right to counsel as a means of challenging the court’s actions is also off the mark. It is no coincidence, we believe, that cases addressing the issue of post-verdict juror inquiry generally look to the Due Process Clause or the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury as the sources of the defendant’s rights.
See, e.g., Tanner,
We therefore reject petitioner’s claim that the trial judge committed constitutional error in excluding counsel from the juror interview. We note, moreover, that the results of the interview plainly demonstrate the absence of any extraneous influence. As described by the Supreme Judicial Court, the juror’s concerns centered entirely on the jury’s internal processes rather than on any external influence, such as a bribe offered to a juror, a threat made against jurors’ family members, or juror exposure to media reports. 5 Irregularities such as those described by the juror are simply part-and-parcel of the jury system, and provide neither a basis for inquiry nor grounds for undermining a verdict:
Statements made by jurors in the jury room which reflect a poor opinion of a *1494 defendant’s character and a belief that the defendant may be likely to commit other criminal acts are undoubtedly frequent occurrences in jury deliberations. Indeed, the opinions they reflect are part of the human element implicit in the jury system.... So long as jurors form their opinions about a defendant free from exposure to prejudicial extraneous information or improper outside influence of a type absent here, jurors are at liberty to express their views free from the threat of post-verdict scrutiny by a federal court....
Mrs. Elliott’s statements relative to the pressures put upon her to change her vote are similarly barred from consideration. Though Mrs. Elliott claims to have been subjected to strong pressure from other jurors, that fact constitutes neither extraneous information nor improper influence to which she could testify.
Smith v. Brewer,
Mahoney also challenges the district court’s decision to dismiss his petition summarily under Rule 4 of the Rules Governing Section 2254 cases. 6 Our discussion makes it clear that brevis disposition was appropriate here. The unfocused nature of the allegations in the letter and their lack of substance, as revealed by the SJC’s unchallenged account of the juror interview, plainly demonstrated that petitioner suffered no constitutional harm. 7
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s summary dismissal of the petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. Rule 606(b) provides, in pertinent part:
Upon an inquiry into the validity of a verdict or indictment, a juror may not testify as to any matter or statement occurring during the course of the jury’s deliberations or to the effect of anything upon that or any other juror's mind or emotions as influencing the juror to assent to or dissent from the verdict or indictment or concerning the juror's mental processes in connection therewith, except that a juror may testify on the question whether extraneous prejudicial information was improperly brought to the jury’s attention or whether any outside influence was improperly brought to bear upon any juror.
. The Supreme Judicial Court found that "nothing in the juror's letter ... necessitated an inquiry,”
. Remmer also is distinguishable because it involved an impropriety brought to light during trial and thus did not implicate the concern for preserving the finality of verdicts.
.
Rushen
involved an
ex parte
communication between a juror and the judge about the juror’s acquaintance with an individual tangentially related to the case. Upon questioning, the juror assured the judge that her disposition of the case would not be affected, and the judge took no further action. The judge did not inform defense attorneys, who found out about the communication only after the case had ended. In his concurrence, Justice Stevens objected to the majority's assuming, without deciding, that the defendant’s constitutional rights to presence and counsel were implicated. The majority made the assumption because those were the rights asserted by the defendant, and the government conceded that the undisclosed
ex parte
communication established constitutional error.
See
Justice Stevens suggests that the only constitutional right implicated in this case is a possible due process right to a midtrial hearing on the subject of the juror’s partiality_ Had the State raised the underlying constitutional right as an issue in the courts below and in the petition for certiorari, this approach might merit consideration.
Id.
.Petitioner does not dispute the SJC’s depiction of the juror interview, and we therefore assume the accuracy of its account. Indeed, we, like the district court, are required to presume the correctness of not only the state court’s findings of facts but also the conclusion reached by both the trial judge and the SJC that no extraneous influences affected the jurors. See supra pp. 1491-92.
. Under Rule 4, a district judge may dismiss a habeas corpus petition summarily “[i]f it plainly appears from the face of the petition and any exhibits annexed to it that the petitioner is not entitled to relief in the district court...."
. It was somewhat inconsistent for the district court to dismiss the petition summarily under Rule 4
and
to grant petitioner a certificate of probable cause, issuance of which generally requires a petitioner to show that questions " ‘de-bateable among jurists of reason’" are presented,
see Moran v. Vose,
