The petitioner is a state prisoner, convicted of rape and robbery in the Corporation Court of Lynchburg, Virginia, in March, 1967. The alleged offense occurred in December, 1962. The petitioner had been tried twice earlier. At the first trial in February, 1963, he was convicted but his conviction was reversed by the Virginia Supreme Court. Wansley v. Commonwealth (1964)
The District Court based its grant of relief on three grounds: 1. Prejudicial pre-trial publicity; 2. Improper admission of evidence; and 3. Illegal grand jury. We shall consider seriatim these grounds.
“In the instant case human life is involved, indeed the life of an ignorant boy 17 years of age has been declared forfeited, and the question to be determined is whether or not the accused, who has been sentenced to suffer the extreme penalty, has had that fair and impartial trial guaranteed to him by our constitution.”
I.
The first position asserted by the petitioner and upheld by the District Court was that the trial court denied him the right to a fair and impartial trial by refusing his motion for a change of venue based on prejudicial pre-trial publicity. It is well established that due process requires that an accused receive a trial by a fair and impartial jury “free from outside influences” ;
4
and if there has been publicity which, by reason of its impact on the jury, raises the “reasonable likelihood”
5
or probability that the accused has been prejudiced in his right to a fair trial, the trial court is obligated to take appropriate steps to determine whether in fact the accused can secure under the circumstances a fair trial.
6
Whether there has been such prejudicial publicity requiring action by the Court is to be determined by an evaluation of “the totality of the surrounding facts” in the matter.
7
Ordinarily, under such a rule, the evaluation will be based both on the pre-trial publicity complained of and on its impact, if any, on the jury,
8
*93
as developed through adequate
voir dire
examination of the jurors.
9
The recency of prejudicial publicity is important in determining whether such publicity is likely to affect an accused’s right to -a fair trial.
10
Obviously, where considerable time has elapsed since publication, the probability or likelihood of impact is appreciably lessened. This has been recognized in the construction given Rule 21(a), Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, authorizing a change of venue in federal criminal trials where there has been impermissibly prejudicial pre-trial publicity. To warrant a change of venue under this rule, the publicity must have been “recent, widespread and highly damaging to the defendants.” 1 Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 342, p. 623. The same principle has been applied where State trials were under review on due process grounds. Uniformly, in the State trials, in which federal
habeas
relief has been sustained by the Supreme Court on the ground of prejudicial publicity, the inflammatory and prejudicial publicity has been close in time to the actual trial. Thus, in Irvin v. Dowd,
supra
(
The pre-trial publicity on which the District Court predicated its findings is identified and discussed in its opinion. That prejudicial of the accused’s claim of innocence was published largely “within two weeks after Wansley’s arrest.” It followed a series of rapes and robberies in the community apparently committed by the same person. It was stated in the record that four separate rapes had been committed. Three whites and a black were the victims. Naturally, there was considerable publicity. When Wansley in the latter part of 1962 was arrested and charged with the crimes, his apprehension and arrest were given a great deal of publicity by the local press. His picture was published under the caption, “Rapist Caught”. The police authorities were quoted to the effect that the petitioner had “confessed to raping two women and attacking one.” It was stated that' he had retraced his trail of crime for the authorities. There were other alleged details given in these articles in late 1962 and early 1963. As the District Court found, there can be little question that these articles were prejudicial to accused’s rights in any trial held quickly thereafter. The petitioner’s first trial followed close on their publication. But we are not concerned with that trial or its fairness; the Virginia Supreme Court reversed the petitioner’s conviction at that trial. And the prejudicial publicity which preceded such trial took place almost five years before the trial with which this petition is concerned. This publicity, concededly adverse and prejudicial can, under no possible theory, be regarded as “recent” as it relates to petitioner’s trial in 1967. If a proper remedy .for such adverse publicity is, as Sheppard suggests, to “continue the case until the threat [of the adverse publicity] abates”, 15 certainly a trial almost five years later represents an appropriate delay; it undoubtedly is far more than was found in Beck to be sufficient to offset widespread publicity of a very damaging character. Moreover, between the trial in 1963 and the trial in 1967, newspaper interest in Wansley’s case — and we may assume local interest, too, for otherwise the press would not have been so reticent — abated and there were only occasional references to his case and then only when some court proceedings were imminent. Any specific newspaper references to the petitioner made during this period, as they are described in the District Court’s opinion, were matter-of-fact statements, clearly not flamboyant or inflammatory. They consisted primarily of descriptions of the petitioner as “twice-convicted”, included in a report that he was to be retried. So far as the opinion of the District Court would indicate, there was no reiteration of any statement that petitioner had confessed; *95 no details of the alleged crime were set forth; there was no reference to any testimony at the prior trials.' Too, the facts published were accurate: The petitioner had been “twice convicted” and he was to be “retried”. The petitioner complains, though, that the news articles should have explained that his two convictions had been reversed. 16 It would seem that this would have necessarily followed from the statement that he was to be “retried”. There would have been no occasion for a retrial had his convictions not been reversed. It is scarcely to be assumed that such sparse references to the petitioner as these between 1963 and 1967 could have created an atmosphere of community prejudice against the petitioner. What was printed in the local press in this period was the normal court items that appear regularly in the press. To find such so prejudicial as to render a trial held in the community where they were published violative of due process would mean that few trials could ever be held in a land where freedom of the press is considered invaluable. The most strongly pressed complaint of the petitioner on publicity in the period from 1963 to 1967 deals with comments published from time to time, not about the petitioner, but about one of his counsel. Whenever the press published the information that petitioner was to be tried, it often referred to one of his counsel, a national figure whose name had often appeared in the news, as an attorney who “has been linked on numerous occasions with Communist-front organizations and efforts.” It is doubtful, however, that any pre-trial reference in the press to an accused’s attorney in the absence of any prejudicial or unfair comment on the accused himself or the merits of his offense, can justify a finding that the accused’s right to a fair trial has been so prejudiced that due process is violated. 17
*94 “By direct contrast, the adverse publicity in the present case appeared several months prior to the trial and the importance of this time-lag cannot be overlooked. Both the Supreme Court and this court have indicated that the length of time between the publication of adverse publicity and the empaneling of the jury is a significant factor in assessing claims of prejudice resulting from pre-trial publicity [citing cases]. Since the articles involved here were twelve weeks old at the time the jury was empanelled, it is highly unlikely that they were retained in the memories of the jurors.”
*95 The District Court made reference, also, in its opinion on this point, to two other items, neither of which it would seem is particularly relevant. One was an editorial in the local papers, answering a criticism leveled at those papers, by the student publication at a local college. The editorial was published on April 4, 1967, some week or more after the petitioner’s trial. Manifestly, it could have had no impact on the defendant’s trial. The other item involved a petition signed and published by a large number of “prominent Lynchburg citizens.” In this petition, the local press was soundly criticized for contributing to the “frustration and bitterness” developing among the Negro citizens by the paper’s policies. When this petition was prepared is not clear from the record but in any event practically every signer of the petition affirmed that the petition was without reference to this case. Moreover, the petition, signed as it was by what the District Court found was such an influential section of the local citizenry, demonstrated rather convincingly that the local press had many powerful detractors and critics in the local community and could not be taken as an accurate or reliable barometer of local opinion.
To summarize the record on the extent and nature of pre-trial publicity as specified and relied on in the opinion of the District Court: The newspaper coverage which may have been prejudicial to petitioner occurred almost five years
*96
before the trial in question; all recent news accounts, though including perhaps derogatory references to one of petitioner’s counsel, were restrained and matter-of-fact in any references to the petitioner himself and included no adverse comments on the issue of his actual guilt; there were none of the flagrant violations committed on the eve and during the trial that marked the situations in either Rideau v. Louisiana (1963)
The
voir dire
examination of the veniremen was extensive.
19
Painstakingly pursued by defendant’s counsel, whose expertise in this field was clearly evident, it comprises some four hundred pages of testimony, wherein every facet of a venireman’s attitude and knowledge of the case was scrupulously probed.
20
Any venireman who expressed a prejudicial attitude toward defendant or his counsel was struck for cause.
21
In addition, each party was allowed to use four peremptory strikes. The veniremen generally admitted that they had read news coverage relating to defendant's case at some time but did not remember any details. It was but natural that the earlier news accounts, giving details of the defendant’s alleged crime and his alleged confession, and occurring as they had almost five years in the past, would necessarily have been obscure at this time in the memory of even these veniremen who may have read them when published. None of the jurors empanelled had formed an opinion concerning petitioner’s guilt or innocence or entertained, according to their sworn testimony, any bias or prejudice against the petitioner’s attorney that might color their verdict. Actually, some of the veniremen expressed a very strong skepticism about the accuracy of items appearing in the press. The District Court found that, “[T]hose veniremen chosen for the jury panel
on the face of their own statements
appear to meet” the standards es
*97
tablished for a fair and impartial jury.
22
It'chose, however, relying on an experience of “over 22 years of trial experience” that “certain veniremen would express, in sincere belief, an impartiality when faced with the duty of sitting on a jury, despite conscious or unconscious reservations”, to find the testimony of the jurors on
voir dire
unbelievable.
23
It did so because “all but a very few veniremen called had admitted knowledge of the case.”
24
It likened the situation in this case to that prevailing in Irvin v. Dowd,
supra
(
The petitioner, however, asserts that the findings and conclusions of the District Court are only to be reversed if “clearly erroneous”. The question posed by this claim of prejudicial publicity is “one of mixed law and fact” and as such is one where “the duty of the Court of Appeals” is “to independently evaluate the voir dire testimony of the impaneled jurors.” 35 And this Court is equally able to do so, since we are in the same position as the District Judge in evaluating the record and in reviewing the findings of the State Court: Neither the District Court nor this Court has had the benefit of observing the jurors and hearing their testimony in person; both must act on the basis of the written record. 36 Moreover, a finding is “clearly erroneous” when “the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed” ; 37 and, on the basis of our independent review of the record — a review we are commanded to make — we are of the firm conviction that the record does not justify a finding that due process was denied the defendant in his trial because of prejudicial pre-trial publicity requiring the granting of his motion for a change of venue.
*99 II.
The second ground on which the District Court predicated a grant of habeas relief concerns the admission of certain testimony of a juvenile court employee in Lynchburg. At the time of his arrest, the petitioner was seventeen years of age and was within the initial jurisdiction of the juvenile courts as established in Virginia. The witness was the chief probation officer of that court. Following petitioner’s arrest, his mother was notified and she came to the jail to visit him. The witness accompanied the mother. This seemingly was routine and there is no suggestion of any improper purpose in the officer’s action. When the mother saw her son she inquired whether he was guilty and spontaneously he replied in the affirmative. The officer who was standing near the mother testified to the conversation between mother and son. It is this conversation, the admission of which the District Court found constitutionally proscribed.
The State Supreme Court, on appeal, found the testimony admissible, stating (
“Suffice it to say, in rejecting this contention, that counsel overlook, or brush aside the fact that Wansley’s spontaneous admission resulted from an unprompted question asked by his mother, not from questioning by Read or the police or any other person.”
In holding to the contrary, the District Court recognized at the outset that the admissibility of evidence at State Court trials is ordinarily “not cognizable on federal habeas corpus” and that the rule in Miranda
38
was not applicable, but concluded that the admission of such evidence offended “fundamental fairness” because it arose out of a violation of the witness’ “role as a juvenile court officer, a
parens
patriae,”
39
It relied for this conclusion on a line of cases from the District of Columbia Circuit, the first of which was Harling v. United States (1961)
Of course, the officer was subjected to sharp cross-examination on this testimony, and it was argued by petitioner’s counsel that the statement, if made, related to another offense. But whether the testimony was to be believed was a matter for resolution by the jury and was not a proper basis for denial of admissibility. It may be noted parenthetically that the mother did not dispute the officer’s testimony.
III.
The final basis on which the District Court acted was that the petitioner was indicted by a grand jury from which blacks were “deliberately and systematically excluded.”
41
This, it found, violated the petitioner’s constitutional rights. In reaching this conclusion, it relied on
*100
the rule stated in Hairston v. Cox (4th Cir. 1972)
Without reviewing all the conclusions reached by the District Court, it seems sufficient that, in our opinion, the record does not, by any standard of “two to one”, or any other standard of representation adopted in the authoritative decisions, establish a pattern of systematic and deliberate exclusion of blacks in the selection of grand juries in the Corporation Court of Lynchburg;
48
and it must be remembered that the burden of establishing such pattern rests on petitioner. Swain v. Alabama
supra
(380 U.S. p. 205,
The District Court based its finding of disproportionate representation on a statistical analysis of grand jury composition in the Corporation Court for the five year period 1962-7. This compilation began with May, 1962, about six months before the grand jury returned its indictment of the petitioner. For some reason, no attempt was made to compile figures on grand jury compositions in the five year period prior to petitioner’s indictment. This would, it seems, have been the pertinent period to review. But, even under the post-indictment compilation, the petitioner failed to make out a prima facie case. According to the compilation offered by the .petitioner there were 169 grand jurors selected in this five year period of whom 20 or 12 per cent were black. The difficulty with this statistic is that it does not purport to show the racial composition of the actual grand juries themselves, as selected over this period. The evidence established that many grand jurors'" served more than once. It accordingly became evident immediately that the use of the raw numbers of the entire jury lists for the five year period, without an examination of the actual juries empanelled is misleading. That many on the list served more than once is established by the record in this ease. Thus, the foreman of the grand jury that indicted the petitioner had served “four or five times” on the grand jury. Two had been on “several times”. It must be remembered that the testimony of the court clerk, as well as the affirmation of the Court Judge, was undisputed that, as long as they had been connected with the Court (which long preceded the indictment of the petitioner and continued long beyond the trial in question), there had been one or more blacks on every grand jury that served. That uncontradicted testimony fixed the pattern of actual selection and it gave no basis in fact for a finding of a “two to one” disproportion in racial representation. Moreover, under the petitioner’s own compilation, the underrepresen-tation did not meet the “2 to 1” test. 49 The finding of the District Court that the undisputed evidence established a prima facie case of underrepresentation was clearly erroneous.
Reversed, with directions to the District Court to dismiss the petition for habeas relief.
Notes
. In reversal, the Supreme Court showed great concern to protect the rights of the petitioner, observing (p. 873, 137 S.E.2d) :
. Wansley v. Commonwealth (1970)
. Cert, denied
. Sheppard v. Maxwell (1966)
. Sheppard v. Maxwell,
supra,
p. 363,
. Sheppard v. Maxwell,
supra,
pp. 358-362,
. Irvin v. Dowd (1961)
.
See
Ignacio v. People of Territory of Guam (9th Cir. 1969)
“ * * * It is not sufficient to simply allege adverse publicity without a showing that the jurors were biased thereby.”
The proper procedure is outlined in Margoles v. United States (7th Cir. 1969)
“We hold that the procedures employed by the district court at the voir dire ex- *93 animation of prospective jurors were adequate to safeguard petitioner against the effect of prejudicial pre-trial publicity, protected his right to a fair trial, and met the standards set by the Supreme Court and by this Court in dealing with similar cases.” (p. 730)
See,
also,
McWilliams v. United States (8th Cir. 1968)
. See, Blumenfield v. United States (8th Cir. 1960)
“It is clear that the mere presence of adverse publicity does not per se establish proof of prejudice, or necessarily establish that a defendant will he unable to obtain a fair trial within the district. ‘The mere fact that a juror has read newspaper accounts relative to a criminal charge is not in itself sufficient grounds for excusing a juror.’ Finnegan v. United States, 8 Cir.,204 F.2d 105 , 110, certiorari denied346 U.S. 821 ,74 S.Ct. 36 ,98 L.Ed. 347 . The ultimate question is whether it is possible to select a fair and impartial jury, and the proper occasion for such a determination is upon the voir dire examination.”
.
See,
United States v. Bowe (2d Cir. 1966)
. The extraordinary circumstances of this case were accurately summarized in Myers v. Frye (7th Cir. 1968)
“ * * * in Sheppard v. Maxwell,384 U.S. 333 ,86 S.Ct. 1507 ,16 L.Ed.2d 600 , no effort was made to insulate the jury from trial publicity, two jurors admitted reading highly inflammatory material, a pre-trial inquest was televised live, and prospective jurors received anonymous letters after pictures of the jurors accompanied by their names and addresses appeared in the press.”
. See, United States v. Bowe,
supra
(
. Mikus v. United States (2d Cir. 1970)
. Irvin v. Dowd,
supra
(
. See
. Wansley v. Commonwealth (1964)
.
Cf.,
United States v. Barber (D.C.Del. 1969)
. The issue under these circumstances was phrased in United States v. Denno (2d Cir. 1963)
“ * * * The reviewing court must determine, from a review of the entire voir dire, whether the- extent and nature of the publicity has caused such a build up of prejudice that excluding the preconception of guilt from the deliberations would be too difficult for the jury to be honestly found impartial.”
. Before the voir dire examination began, the trial court advised counsel for the defendant :
“As I advised you before, the Court is going to be very lenient with you, in the examination of the prospective jurors, so that if there is any way possible, the jurors can be ascertained whether or not they have any prejudice for or against the accused in this case; so that every safeguard will be met, in order to assure this accused a fair and impartial jury.”
. Contrast the wide latitude allowed by the trial court in the
voir dire
examination with that in United States v. Dellinger (7th Cir. 1972)
. Because of the disqualification of all who had formed, however tentatively, an opinion, the trial court did what the trial court did in Tasby v. United States (8th Cir. 1971)
. Wansley v. Miller,
.
.
.
. 366 U.S. at pp. 725-726,
.
See, also,
Hale v. United States (5th Cir. 1970)
“ * * * potential jurors need not be totally ignorant of the facts of a ease.”
.
See
Evans v. State of Arizona (9th Cir. 1969)
“The fact that several jurors, or all the members of a panel, have read newspaper articles relating to a case does not disqualify them as jurors. This is true even though a juror may have had a preconceived notion as to the guilt or innocence of an accused.”
To the same effect: Reynolds v. United States, (1878)
.
.
.
.
.
. '
. Irvin v. Dowd,
supra
(
.
See,
Orvis v. Higgins (2d Cir. 1950)
Ordinarily, the resolution of a motion for change of venue rests with the trial court and its decision is to be reversed only for abuse of discretion or, as Irvin puts it, “where prejudice is ‘manifest’.” (366 U.S. at p. 724 ,81 S.Ct. 1639 ) Dosek v. United States (8th Cir. 1968)405 F.2d 405 , 408, cert, denied395 U.S. 943 ,89 S.Ct. 2014 ,23 L.Ed.2d 461 . In United States v. Bowe, supra (360 F.2d 1 , at p. 11), the Court said:
“ * * * Whether publicity is so prejudicial that it forecloses the possibility of a fair trial is a determination which is well-suited for the trial judge since he has an opportunity to observe the impact of publicity on the jurors. Consequently, he should have wide discretion to assess such matters and his view should be determinative unless that discretion is abused.”
. United States v. Gypsum Co. (1948)
. Miranda v. Arizona (1966)
. 353 F.Supp. pp. 54, 55.
.
. As originally stated the attack was broader but the decision pf the District Court was based on the charge of racial discrimination and, on appeal, the petitioner has confined himself to this charge. It is. unnecessary, therefore, to consider the other claims.
.
.
. Witcher v. Peyton (4th Cir. 1969)
.
.
.
.
Cf.,
White v. State (1973)
. The black representation on the list prepared by the petitioner was 12% and the proportion of blacks in the population was 23%.
