Larry D. Harris appeals from a judgment entered on a jury verdict convicting him of first-degree intentional homicide, as party to a crime, while armed with a dangerous weapon, and attempted first-degree intentional homicide, as party to a crime, while armed with a dangerous weapon.
See
§§ 940.01(1), 939.05, 939.63, & 939.32, Stats. He also appeals from the trial court's order denying his motion for postcon-viction relief. He claims that the trial court violated his
*834
rights by conducting part of the jury-selection process when both he and his lawyer were not in court. We agree and reverse for a new trial. Harris also claims that the trial court erred in not severing the trial in his case from that of his co-defendant, Terrance C. Harris, his brother.
1
In light of our resolution of the first claim of trial-court error, we do not discuss the severance issue.
See Gross v. Hoffman,
I.
Jury selection in this case was to begin the morning of September 23, 1996. Although Harris's brother and lawyers for both defendants were present when the case was called, Harris was not. The trial court announced that there had been a glitch in producing Harris from a prison in Dodge County, and that it did not believe that Harris would arrive in Milwaukee before noon. The trial court said that it was "extremely disappointed" by the delay because there were "50 jurors sitting over in Jury Management," and suggested to the lawyers for Harris and his brother that it informally "weed out" potential jurors who could not sit:
I guess the one, ah, thing we may be able to do, ah, is for me to go over and talk to the group of potential jurors, and see if I can weed out or excuse any of them who have, in my view, legitimate reasons for not being able to serve on a trial, which will be a sequestered jury in which, um, is likely to take four or five days to finish.
*835 The trial court asked whether either Harris's lawyer or the lawyer for Harris's brother had "any objection to my doing that." Both replied: "No." The trial court recognized, however, that it was venturing into thorny territory: "Obviously, um, I will need to affirm that with Mr. Larry Harris when he gets here, um, that he's been advised of that and doesn't have an objection to it." The trial court excused the lawyers, telling them to "plan on being back here at 11:30." The transcript indicates that immediately thereafter "a recess commenced at 9:34 a.m."
Some time after the 9:34 a.m. recess, the case was called again. Forty potential jurors were present, as were Terrance Harris, his lawyer, and the prosecutor. Although the trial court had indicated that it would "go over" to the "Jury Management" room where the trial's potential jurors were waiting, the jurors were brought to the courtroom. The trial court's interaction with the potential jurors was recorded and transcribed. Harris's lawyer was not present for most of the trial court's colloquy with the forty jurors; Harris was not there for any of the colloquy with any of the jurors that morning — either the first group of forty or a second group of twenty.
Before Harris's lawyer returned to the courtroom later that morning, the trial court first asked the forty potential jurors if any of them had heard or read about the case — it involved a highly publicized drive-by shooting. All but five jurors indicated that they had. The trial court then explained to the venire panel the obligation of every juror to be fair and impartial, informed them that the State had the burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, and asked if there were any who believed that they could be not be fair and impartial. Three persons so indicated. The trial court also *836 told the panel that jury service occasionally created scheduling problems for jurors, and asked if anyone wished to be excused because jury service would conflict with their personal or work obligations. A number of persons, including one who had previously indicated that he could not be fair and impartial, indicated that they wished to be excused due to conflicting obligations. The trial court then read to the venire panel a list of potential witnesses. Six persons, including two who had previously indicated that they could not be fair and impartial, indicated that they knew one or more of the potential witnesses. One of the six, a Milwaukee police officer who had worked on the case, told the trial court in front of the venire panel: "I think at one point we may have gone to look for some of the people involved."
After its colloquy with the panel of forty, the trial court released for lunch nineteen persons who had not indicated that there was an impediment to their sitting as jurors, and told them to return to the trial court's jury room at 11:30 a.m. The trial court then questioned the twenty-one remaining panel members, asking why they believed that they could not be fair jurors or why they believed that their work or personal obligations would prevent them from serving. In response to one of the trial court's questions to him, the Milwaukee police officer again said that he had "done some work on" the case. The trial court also had the following colloquy in front of the other panel members with another potential juror:
THE COURT: ... You didn't indicate you had a problem with jury service, but you did indicate some concern about being a fair and impartial juror?
[THE JUROR]: Right. I believe they are guilty already and I believe.
*837 THE COURT: Is that based on because of what you read in the paper?
[THE JUROR]: What I have read and seen on television. Yes.
After more colloquy with that juror, the trial court took a brief recess, excused five potential jurors, including the police officer, and asked the remaining jurors, including the woman who said that she believed that the defendants were "guilty already," to also return to its courtroom at 11:30 a.m. The trial court then welcomed a group of twenty potential jurors and repeated the process.
As later recounted by the trial court without contradiction when both defendants, their lawyers, and the prosecutor were in court, Harris's lawyer was present during the morning session "for at least a portion of the first group" of jurors and "all of the second group." Harris was not present for either group. Harris's lawyer testified at the postconviction hearing that he "was present near the end of the Court's questioning" of the first group, but that "about $9 percent of it had been completed."
After voir dire of the potential jurors by the trial court and the lawyers, during which both defendants and their counsel were present, the trial court asked Harris's lawyer to discuss with Harris what happened in their absence and see if Harris objected. The lawyer did and, in a one word response to a comment by Terrance Harris's lawyer, Harris indicated that he did not object. 2 The trial court did not personally ask Harris *838 any questions — it did not probe either Harris's understanding of his right to be present with his lawyer during jury selection or the voluntariness of the purported waiver. Four of the first group of forty were selected as deliberating jurors; one served as the jury's forelady.
*839 II.
As the State concedes, § 971.04(l)(c), Stats., 1995-96, declared that a defendant in a criminal case has the right to be present "[a]t all proceedings when the jury is being selected," and under
State v. Koopmans,
Deprivation of both the right of the defendant to be present and the right to have counsel present at jury
*840
selection is subject to a "harmless error" analysis.
See David J.K.,
The "harmless error" rule recognizes that not all constitutional errors require automatic reversal.
See Burton,
Just as the line between what is and what is not a permissible deprivation of assistance of counsel can be
"thin"
— compare
Geders v. United States,
Wisconsin decisions applying the "harmless error" rule to a situation either where a defendant has been denied a right granted by § 971.04(1), Stats., or where the trial court erroneously acted when the defendant's lawyer was not present, concern situations where, in the context of the case, the deprivations were essentially
de minimis.
For example, in
Burton,
the trial judge entered the jury room to chat with the jurors about their progress in deliberations, to tell them what arrangements would be made for their dinner and
*842
receipt of their verdict if they reached a verdict, and that they should not discuss the case outside of the jury room if their deliberations carried over to a second day.
Id.,
In
McMahon,
the trial court communicated with the deliberating jury six times.
Id.,
In
Mills,
the trial court began instructing the jury ten minutes before the defense lawyer arrived.
Id.,
In
Peterson,
the defendant's lawyer was present and gave his input to the trial court on the legal issues involved in answering the jury's questions.
Id.,
*844
This case is substantially different from those applying the "harmless error" rule for two major reasons. First, a defendant has an absolute right "to receive a fair trial by a panel of impartial jurors."
State v. Faucher,
Second, "the interplay between potential jurors and a defendant, while often subtle, is both immediate and continuous."
State v. Garcia-Contreras,
Although the trial court was well-intentioned by trying to save time and "weed out" jurors before Harris arrived and, for the most part, when Harris's lawyer was not in court, its extensive colloquy with potential jurors on the morning of September 23 essentially presented Harris and his lawyer with a pig in a poke. The State has not established that this did not adversely affect Harris's substantial rights under § 971.04(l)(c), Stats., and, therefore, has not shown that the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Cf. State v. Erickson,
By the Court. — Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded.
Notes
Unless otherwise specified, all references in this opinion to "Harris" are to the appellant, Larry D. Harris.
Harris's acquiescence was in the following context. Harris's lawyer explained to the trial court that he had told Harris that the trial court had done a "pre screening," which "was of a nature where it's not people that had bad experiences or are intimately related to police or in fact, are officers themselves. It
*838 was more in the nature of sole businessmen, people who have commitments, unshakable; the kind of things that develop during a voir dire. But that could be handled while he was in route and told him as much as I might have wanted to have some of the people, I also wanted to have a jury that didn't think, if they were a one man shop, their business was going to go down the tubes. Therefore they would rush. In the same way, someone with a child, they wouldn't be separated from for a time to feel rushed. Mr. Harris agreed that any actions, I gave him a few examples of what went on this morning, were appropriate and he agrees with them." (Court reporter's paragraph break ignored.)
The trial court, the lawyer for Harris's brother, and Harris then had the following exchange:
THE COURT: I would just reaffirm, of the 60 potential jurors we saw this morning, I released 9 and only for reasons related to their ability to serve on a sequestered 4 or 5 day jury. They were not released for any reasons along the lines of what we just talked about of people being able to be fair or impartial. They had situations; one had a husband going in for medical tests on Wednesday that had a heart condition she would be concerned about that couldn't serve on a jury that long. That is one that comes to mind.
So, all right and I don't think there is really, of the 9, 4 were from the second group which we have hardly gotten into. So, I don't really see any prejudice to Mr. Larry Harris in any event, even though he wasn't here. Anything else we need to do?
[Lawyer for Harris's brother]: And Mr. Harris agrees with the procedure. Is that a yes?
MR. LARRY HARRIS: Yes.
Section 971.04(l)(c), STATS., 1997-98, which became effective on July 1, 1997,
see
Supreme Court Order No. 96-08,
