During selection of the jury, the assistant district attorney who was prosecuting for the State made a statement that other codefendants named in the bill of indictment had entered pleas of guilty. Defendant’s counsel promptly objected and moved for a mistrial. The court denied the motion but instructed the jury panel that defendant had pled not guilty, that he was presumed to be innocent, and that “ [a] ny remarks by the Solicitor will not be considered against him in any way whatsoever.” Later, while the prosecuting attorney was examining a State’s witness, the witness referred to another person named in the indictment, whereupon the prosecuting attorney asked the witness if the person referred to was another codefendant in this case “who pled guilty yesterday.” The court promptly sustained defendant’s objection and instructed the jury not to consider the statement but to dismiss it from their minds. Subsequently, while continuing with the examination of the same witness the prosecuting attorney again asked, this time concerning still another person who had been referred to by the witness, if this person was not a codefendant in this case who “pled guilty yesterday.” Again the court sustained defendant’s objection and instructed the jury not to consider the statement but to dismiss it from their minds. After completion of the evidence and while arguing the case to the jury, the prosecuting attorney again referred to “all of the others having pled guilty.” The court again sustained defendant’s objection but denied his motion for a mistrial. Argument by counsel to the jury continued and the counsel for the State again referred to “the others having pled guilty.” Defendant’s counsel again objected and moved for a mistrial. The court again denied the motion, but repeated its instructions to the jury that it should “not consider the Solicitor’s statement as to anyone, other than the witnesses in this case, who has pled guilty.”
Evidence that a codefendant who was not a witness had pled guilty to the same charge was not competent against the defendant on trial.
State v. Kerley,
“The rationale of this rule is that every person charged with the commission of a criminal offense must be tried upon evidence
against Mm.
Evidence competent and satisfactory against one person is not necessarily competent against another charged with the same crime. The introduction of such a plea
*577
when the witness has not testified against the defendant would also deprive a defendant of his constitutional rights of confrontation and cross-examination.”
State v. Cameron,
In the present case the able trial judge ruled correctly in every instance and did what he could to correct the impact upon the jurors of the incompetent evidence which the prosecuting attorney persisted in bringing to their attention. The question presented is whether, despite these efforts of the trial judge to conduct a trial according to the rules of law, the actions of the prosecuting attorney resulted in depriving the defendant of his fundamental right to a fair trial. We hold that they did and that defendant is entitled to a new trial.
“Prosecuting attorneys are in a very peculiar sense servants of the law. . . . They owe the duty to the State which they represent, the accused whom they prosecute, and the cause of justice which they serve to observe the rules of practice created by law to give those tried for crime the safeguards of a fair trial.”
State v. Phillips,
The verdict and judgment are vacated and a new trial ordered.
New trial.
