Lead Opinion
Steven M. Castillo seeks habeas corpus, having been convicted of murder in California. The district court-denied his petition. We affirm.
FACTS
Castillo was convicted of aiding and abetting the murder of Eric Reimer by Ramon Arreaga on March 16, 1987. The state presented evidence that Arreaga entered the Bob-Les bar and shot Reimer four times in the head. He then left the bar, got into his car, and drove off. The evidence against Castillo was that shortly before the shooting he was seen talking to Arreaga in the Bob-Les parking lot. After the shooting Castillo was in the parking lot with a rifle in his hands and fired shots at two persons who came into the parking lot following Reimer’s murder. Castillo accompanied Arreaga in his getaway and, when the car got stuck and was abandoned, continued to accompany Arreaga. When police told them to freeze, both Arreaga and Castillo ran.
They were later apprehended together and when put in the police car, Castillo told Arreaga, “We did it man, we did it; it’s okay.” Castillo also telephoned Jona Hamlin, an off-duty bartender at the Bob-Les club, before his arrest and asked for someone named Johnny. She told him that Johnny was not there and then asked “Why?” Castillo replied, “I had to. It was a contract.”
Arreaga and Castillo were tried together for murder. Castillo was shackled by his waist and left arm when he appeared in the courtroom. The trial court ordered that his arm be freed, but deferred ruling on the waist chain until it could hear from the sheriff’s office about him. Later the same day the sheriff’s department informed the court that Castillo was housed in a disciplinary “separation area” for having assaulted other inmates. Castillo was permitted to conceal the waist chain by putting his shirt over it. When he testified he
At trial, the court rejected the request of Castillo’s counsel to cross-examine government witness Leonard Lopez regarding a pending state case against him to determine if any deal had been offered in exchange for his testimony.
After exhausting his appeals in the state system, Castillo filed a pro se petition for habeas corpus. Without holding an eviden-tiary hearing, a magistrate made findings and a recommendation denying the writ; the district court adopted the magistrate’s report in full.
Castillo appealed. In the course of the appeal he filed an affidavit of counsel claiming that the shackling interfered with counsel-client communication. The affidavit was not part of the record in the district court and comes too late to be considered here.
ANALYSIS
Castillo’s objection to the limit on Lopez’s cross-examination is without merit. See United States v. Jenkins,
This court has announced the standard by which it reviews a state trial court’s decision to shackle a defendant as “an abuse of discretion standard.” Jones v. Meyer,
Consequently, the announced standard must be read as a cryptic way of stating that a federal court in this circuit holds it to be a denial of due process of law if a state trial court, without complying with the criteria set by this court, orders shackling of such a character that it denies the defendant due process of law. The error then is of constitutional magnitude. We so held in Spain v. Rushen,
According to our criteria, the trial court “must be persuaded by compelling circumstances” that some measures were needed to maintain security. Jones,
In deciding what are the less restrictive alternatives, the state trial court must begin by assessing “the limitations” present if shackles are applied. Id. These so-called “limitations,” or, more precisely, harms, include (1) reversal of the presumption of innocence, (2) impairment of the defendant’s mental ability, (3) impeding of communication between the defendant and his counsel, (4) detraction from the decorum of the trial, and (5) pain. Id. “After considering these factors, the trial judge ‘must weigh the benefits and [these] burdens of shackling against other possible alternatives.’ ” Id. (quoting Spain,
It is apparent that the trial court did not comply with the criteria laid down by this circuit. Certainly, the report of the sheriff’s department suggested that some measures were needed to maintain security. But the trial court did not undertake the
It has been argued that not every shackling must be justified by the criteria set out in Jones. It is true that only the most egregious kind of shackling has been found by us to deny due process. See Spain,
In the light of these precedents, it is too late in the day for us to say that chaining of a defendant in a courtroom during trial may ever be done without compliance with our criteria. Unless we were to abandon doctrine repeatedly announced and applied, we are bound to hold that constitutional error is committed by a state court that shackles without such compliance.
Chaining of a prisoner in transport to the courtroom is a different matter. In our supervision of the district courts, we have said that the defendant could ask for a voir dire of the jury if a juror saw the defendant in handcuffs outside the courtroom. United States v. Halliburton,
We are left with constitutional error by the court permitting Castillo’s shackling during the trial. There are constitutional violations, broadly described as “structural,” which so impair a fair trial that by definition they can never be harmless. Chapman v. California,
Although the evidence offered against Castillo was circumstantial, the state demonstrated that he was- guilty of aiding and abetting the murder of Reimer. He conferred with Arreaga as the would-be murderer entered the bar to kill his victim. He took up a position as a guard of Arreaga’s escape, armed with a rifle, the presence of which he implausibly explained. He used the rifle, firing shots to warn off all possible pursuers. He joined Arreaga in the escape. He congratulated Arreaga on the work they had jointly done. The evidence established that Castillo shared Arreaga’s intent to kill and was “present for the purpose of assisting in [the crime’s] commission.” People v. Rodriguez,
The evidence on which the jury acted must now be evaluated in light of the court’s error in too quickly permitting shackling. The waist chain could not be seen by the jury. Counsel for Castillo argues that the jury might have inferred the presence of restraints from the fact that Castillo’s co-defendant Arreaga walked to and from the witness stand while the jury saw Castillo as a seated witness who did not move while the jury was in the courtroom. Counsel’s speculation is unpersuasive that such a subtle inference was drawn. The restraint in the courtroom was so worn by Castillo that the jury could not see it. Unseen, the restraint could not have affected the presumption of innocence or detracted from the decorum of the trial. See Jones,
AFFIRMED.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the opinion, but would not address the issue of whether the shackling in this case violated the Constitution. The state trial judge was not arbitrary, capricious, or discriminatory in his ruling. Castillo was charged with first-degree murder and was housed in a disciplinary “separation area” for having assaulted other inmates. Under these circumstances, I believe there is a substantial question whether the type of shackling that was ordered, which was not visible to the jury and would not likely cause pain or a major interference to communication with counsel, reached the level of a constitutional violation of due process. None of the cases from this circuit directly addresses this issue, nor has it been specifically decided by the Supreme Court. Because I believe we should not rule on such an important constitutional issue unless necessary to resolve the appeal, I would rest the decision on the harmless error analysis. See Kolender v. Lawson,
