27 Mich. App. 539 | Mich. Ct. App. | 1970
On December 13, 1967, defendant Andrew Thomas was arrested and charged with the sale and possession of narcotics. He was convicted of both charges, in a jury trial which commenced on March 20, 1969, and sentenced on April 10, 1969, to a term of not less than 20 years nor more than 21 years for the sale of narcotics with the recommendation of a 5 year minimum and a period of not less than 5 years nor more than 10 years on the conviction of possession of narcotics. In the process of selecting the jury the original panel was exhausted before a jury of 12 could be selected. The trial court authorized the bailiff to go out into the community and summon nine additional people from which would be selected the jurors to fill the remaining positions on the jury. The people summoned by the bailiff were persons employed in various offices in the county building. Two of the nine selected by this additional summoning process were eventually accepted by both parties and impaneled by the court.
Immediately preceding the beginning of the trial the Muskegon Chronicle had run a ten day series of articles analyzing and discussing the problems surrounding the use of narcotics.
Initially the defendant appealed this case on the basis of two objections. The first that there was
With regards to the first objection concerning the improper selection of jurors the position of the defendant is correct in light of the newly adopted jury board law which was enacted as PA 1968, No 326, but this law had not yet been implemented in Muskegon County and the jury board therein provided had not yet taken office. Defendant specifically claims the selection of the jury violated MCLA § 600.1307(1) (Stat Ann 1970 Cum Supp § 27A.1307[1]) which provides in part:
“The following persons are prohibited from jury service and the jury board shall strike their names from the qualified jurors list:
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“(b) County officers and employees.”
However, the defendant is precluded from using this argument because he waived objection to the additional jurors by not challenging them peremptorily or for cause during the voir dire examination, and the record clearly indicates that the defendant knew the two so-called talesmen to be employed in the county building and that one was an employee of the county equalization department and the other an employee of the intermediate school district. The
The second objection alleging lack of a fair trial as a result of adverse publicity is also without merit. The articles in the Muskegon Chronicle were of a general nature and there was no specific reference to this defendant or to the particular acts for which he was charged or convicted. In People v. Jenkins (1968), 10 Mich App 257, the Court upheld a conviction in spite of publicity concerning the particular crime. The Court stated that reading or hearing of the case does not in itself prejudice a juror. The Court also stated that it is not necessary for a fair trial that jurors have no impression or opinion of the crime. The only requirement is that a juror be able to view the evidence alone without influence from prior impressions or opinions. There is no
At the time this matter w7as argued to the Court of Appeals defendant filed a supplemental brief contending further that this case should be reversed on two additional grounds. Neither of the two additional grounds were raised in the trial court nor in a motion for a new trial. They are not, therefore, properly before this Court for consideration when raised here for the first time. See People v. Omell (1968), 15 Mich App 154.
Since all objections raised on appeal are invalid the conviction must be affirmed.