The plaintiff filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against guards and other personnel at a county jail in which he’d been a pretrial detainee. His claim that they had used excessive force against him survived summary judgment and was tried to a jury, which found for the defendants. The plaintiff was a prison inmate at the time of his trial, and his only substantial claim on appeal is that he was denied a fair trial because he was compelled to wear shackles and his prison uniform in the courtroom—
Remarkably, the record does not indicate the extent to which Maus was shackled. We know that before the trial began his lawyer asked the judge to direct that Maus be free of “all shackles, hand cuffs, leg irons, and other restraints” during the trial. And we know that he was handcuffed during the trial except when he testified. What we don’t know is whether he was wearing leg irons — better described as “ankle cuffs,” and now often called “legcuffs,” since they differ from handcuffs only in being somewhat larger.
The sight of a shackled litigant is apt to make jurors think they’re dealing with a mad dog; and just the contrast between a litigant’s wearing prison garb and his opponents’ wearing law enforcement uniforms is likely to influence the jury against the prisoner, and has long been recognized as being highly prejudicial. See, e.g., Holbrook v. Flynn,
There may have been adequate reasons to shackle the plaintiff in this case — a violent person, who had attacked guards — but the shackles should have been concealed from the jury. E.g., id.; Sides v. Cherry,
The “curative instruction” that the judge failed to give would not have eliminated the prejudice to the plaintiff arising from the visible manacles, the prison uniforms, and the guards’ uniforms. Curative instructions have (as judges too rarely acknowledge) only limited efficacy. As we said in United States v. Mazzone,
As for the judge’s requiring the plaintiff to wear his prison clothing in court while allowing the defendants to wear their guard uniforms, no consideration of security justified that requirement and that permission. Estelle v. Williams, supra,
More important, being told that a plaintiff is a prisoner and the defendants guards, and seeing them in uniforms — one type of uniform branding the plaintiff as a prison inmate, the other denoting the defendants’ status as law enforcers — are likely to create impressions differing in their strength. Although judges have been known to remark that if a party is known to be a prisoner, seeing him dressed as one adds nothing to whatever prejudice jurors harbor against prisoners, e.g., United States v. Brooks,
We said in Lemons v. Skidmore,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
