The primary issue is whether a prosecutor’s comments about a defendant’s failure to inform law enforcement authorities of his alibi defense violated his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination and his right to due process. Additional issues are: (1) whether the trial court was correct in finding that the prosecutor’s summation to the jury referred to the defendant’s pretrial failure to bring forth his alibi defense and (2) whether the harmless error doctrine neutralizes the constitutional impairment if it existed.
Petitioner-appellee Melvin Lee Smith requested the district court, under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, to issue a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that his state court conviction for robbery was void on constitutional grounds. The district court vacated the judgment of conviction, but it withheld the issuance of the writ for a period of 120 days so as to afford the State of Illinois an opportunity to initiate a new trial proceeding. This appeal by the respondents, Charles J. Rowe, Director, Illinois Department of Corree *1206 tions, and William Klusak, Sheriff, Kane County, Illinois, followed. *
Petitioner was indicted in June 1974 by a Kane County grand jury for the armed robbery on March 26, 1974 of Claudia Watson, the night auditor of the Hilton Hotel in Aurora, Illinois. He was found guilty by a jury and was sentenced to a term of four years imprisonment. At the trial, defense witness Betty Walls, who was living with petitioner at the time of the robbery, testified that she and the petitioner were home that evening playing cards. During cross-examination the witness testified that a police officer came to her residence the evening before petitioner’s trial on September 30, 1974, but she refused to talk to the officer. The petitioner was also present, according to her testimony. Petitioner, testifying in his own behalf, stated that he and Walls were home on the night of the robbery. He also testified that when the police officer came to interview Walls on the eve of the trial, he told the officer that he could talk to Walls only in the presence of petitioner’s lawyer.
During the State’s closing and rebuttal arguments, the prosecutor made comments which are the basis of the instant habeas petition (see n. 1 of the district court’s memorandum opinion which is appended).
Judge Will wrote a thorough opinion explicating his determinations. After considering the respective contentions of the parties, we are satisfied with the judge’s reasoning and the result he reached. We therefore adopt his opinion as our own (see Appendix) with these additional comments.
Although
Doyle v. Ohio,
It seems clear that the Supreme Court in
Doyle
left open the very question presented in the instant case.
Doyle, supra,
What we have just stated serves as a predicate for the constitutional error assert
*1207
ed by petitioner: the comments of the prosecutor on the failure of the petitioner to furnish his alibi defense to the police at any time before his trial. We see no legal distinction between the comments by the prosecutor to the jury and any attempt he might have undertaken to impeach petitioner or Walls on cross-examination.
Cf. Griffin v. California,
In respect to the other issues, we are convinced that Judge Will was correct in his determinations.
The order granting the writ is affirmed.
APPENDIX
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION
United States of America ex rel. Melvin Lee Smith,
Petitioner,
v.
Charles J. Rowe, Director, Illinois Department of Corrections, and William Klusak, Sheriff, Kane County, Illinois.
Respondents.
No. 78 C 2853
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Petitioner Melvin Lee Smith brings this petition for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 on the ground that the state court prosecutor committed constitutional error in his closing argument to the jury and that such error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Specifically, petitioner contends that the prosecutor commented upon petitioner’s failure to come forward prior to trial with the alibi to which petitioner testified at trial, and that such comment constituted impermissible impeachment by use of post-arrest silence in contravention of
Doyle v. Ohio,
This case comes before the Court on respondent’s motion to dismiss and petitioner’s motion for summary judgment. While .this is a close case insofar as the existence of constitutional error is concerned, for the reasons hereinafter stated we grant petitioner’s motion for summary judgment and grant the writ.
BACKGROUND
Petitioner was tried in the Circuit Court of Kane County on September 30 and October 1,1974 on the charge of having committed an armed robbery at the Hilton Inn in North Aurora, Illinois on March 26, 1974. At trial, petitioner advanced an alibi defense and both he and his girl friend, Ms. Betty Walls, testified that they had been home together on the night of the robbery. After the close of the evidence, the prosecutor made the following statements in his initial closing argument:
The defense is alibi. Now, this is a very interesting alibi. I want you all to think what you would do in a situation like this, what you would do, and if you feel that this alibi was handled the way you would handle it I will be surprised. ******
In fact, yesterday when we attempted to talk to her [Ms. Walls] about an alibi she wouldn’t talk to us, she wouldn’t talk to the police officer. Melvin Smith, the same guy that wasn’t at the hearing, that hid in the back, maybe, told her not to. If you had what this is supposed to be, an ironclad alibi, you were home with your spouse, or your friend, or your buddy, or girl friend or boy friend and you knew it, one week from the day that the thing happened, had happened on a late Monday, early Tuesday, and you knew on Monday or Sunday next that he was supposed to, wouldn’t you run to the police and say: ‘Hey, look, he was with me, he didn’t do it.’
Which one of you would not? They didn’t. They had no obligation to. By *1208 the way, they have no obligation to tell us anything, but wouldn’t you, if you were innocent and if you had a loved one in trouble, run in and tell the police? You’re right, you would.
Trial Transcript (T.Tr.), at 248-250. Following defense counsel’s closing argument, the prosecutor made the following comments in his rebuttal argument with respect to the alibi defense:
And even when the police were out there to ask her about it she wouldn’t talk — or he wouldn’t let her talk about it. That’s a curious thing. Why, why wouldn’t anybody talk about the alibi until we get to Court?
T.Tr., at 264. The jury found petitioner guilty of armed robbery.
Subsequent to petitioner’s conviction, petitioner retained different counsel for the purpose of filing post-trial motions. Post-trial motions were heard by the trial judge on January 30, 1975. During the hearing, petitioner’s new counsel raised for the first time his objection to the prosecutor's closing arguments insofar as the comments upon petitioner’s prior silence were concerned. Hearing Transcript (H.Tr.), at 18-26, 66-68, 71-72. The trial judge concluded, however, that the prosecutor’s closing argument had not violated the petitioner’s right to remain silent. H.Tr., at 86-87. Petitioner was sentenced to four years and one day imprisonment.
Petitioner appealed his conviction to the Appellate Court of Illinois, Second Judicial District.
People v. Smith,
[a]n unbiased reading of the entire record clearly reveals that the prosecutor was referring to the defendant’s undisputed ordering of the witness to refuse to talk to the prosecutor’s representative and not of any failure or refusal of the defendant himself to speak.
VIOLATION OF PETITIONER’S DUE PROCESS RIGHTS
Petitioner contends that the prosecutor’s comments in closing argument impermissibly referred to petitioner’s pretrial silence and thereby violated both his fifth amendment right to remain silent and his due process rights. In the context of this case, petitioner’s argument raises two important questions: (1) were the prosecutor’s comments directed towards petitioner’s failure to come forward with the alibi defense, and (2), if so, does the prosecutorial comment on the petitioner’s failure to come forward constitute constitutional error?
Insofar as the first of these questions is concerned, a fair reading of the trial transcript and the closing arguments by both the prosecutor and petitioner's trial counsel indicates that the primary focus of the prosecutor’s comments insofar as petitioner’s alibi defense was concerned was toward Ms. Walls’ failure to give a similar story to the police at any point prior to trial. 1 In so *1209 arguing, the prosecutor clearly sought to impeach Ms. Walls’ veracity as a witness in support of petitioner’s alibi defense. 2 Notwithstanding the prosecutor’s primary focus upon impeaching Ms. Walls’ testimony, it is clear that on several separate occasions during his closing arguments, one of which was of significant duration, the prosecutor’s language literally embraced both petitioner and Ms. Walls.
The Illinois Appellate Court concluded with respect to these comments that “the prosecutor was referring to the defendant’s undisputed ordering of the witness to refuse to talk to the prosecutor’s representative.”
People v. Smith,
supra, 52 111. App.3d at 591,
While the appellate court’s interpretation of the prosecutor’s comments has some support in the record, we do not find the appellate court’s analysis persuasive. 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(8). In his comments preceding his repeated references to “they”, T.Tr., at 250, the prosecutor had discussed broadly Ms. Walls’ failure to come forward at any time prior to the trial, as well as discussing Ms. Walls’ failure to come forward on the day prior to her actual testimony. In addition, he also referred to “if you were innocent”, T.Tr., at 250, and “Why, why wouldn’t anybody talk about the alibi until we get to Court?” T.Tr., at 264 (underscoring supplied). Viewing the prosecutor’s comments as a whole, they are clearly susceptible of being interpreted as referring to both petitioner and Ms. Walls’ failures to come forward any any time before trial.
Notwithstanding our conclusion that the prosecutor’s literal language also embraced the defendant’s pretrial silence, the question remains whether these comments are, for purposes of constitutional analysis, to be deemed a reference to the defendant’s prior silence. Neither the Supreme Court nor the Seventh Circuit has yet specifically set forth a test to determine when ambiguous prosecutorial comments will constitute an invasion of the defendant’s right to remain silent after his arrest. However, at least one circuit has ruled with respect to
Doyle
-type situations that a comment is deemed to be such a reference if either (1) it was the prosecutor’s manifest intention to refer to the defendant’s silence, or (2) the remark was of such a character that the jury would “naturally and necessarily” take it to be a comment on the defendant’s silence.
United States
v.
Edwards,
Evaluating the challenged comments by reference to this standard, we cannot conclude that they were “manifestly intended” to refer to petitioner’s silence. There are indications that the prosecutor’s choice of words was not accidental and might well have been intentional, particularly in his repeated use of the word “they.” T.Tr., at 250. However, in light of the dominant focus of the closing arguments on the impeachment of Ms. Walls and of the fact that the prosecutor did not cross-examine petitioner with respect to his failure to come forward at any time prior to trial, we cannot conclude that he “manifestly intended” to include petitioner in his remarks. Notwithstanding this conclusion, we find the prosecutor’s remarks to be of such a character that the jury would “naturally and necessarily” take them to be a comment on the defendant’s silence. Repetition of the word “they”, in contrast to the immediately prior comments which were focused only upon Ms. Walls’ silence, is juxtaposed so as to call the jury’s attention to the petitioner’s as well as Ms. Walls’ silence. Moreover, while the reference to “anybody” in the rebuttal argument is of lesser importance and of itself would be inadequate to justify a finding of improper comment,
see United States v. Aldridge,
This is a close case. Moreover, we recognize that defense counsel’s failure to
*1211
object at the time of the prosecutor’s closing argument is a factor to be weighed in deciding whether or not the prosecutor’s remarks are to be considered as improper comments.
See United States v. Hansen,
Having concluded that the prosecutor’s comments were directed towards the petitioner’s failure to come forward at any time prior to trial with his alibi defense, the question remains whether these comments constitute constitutional error. Petitioner relies primarily on
Doyle v. Ohio, supra;
and
United States v. Hale,
In
Hale,
the Supreme Court, exercising its supervisory powers over the lower federal courts, held on non-constitutional grounds that a defendant’s silence at the time of arrest and during police interrogation lacked significant probative value and that “any reference to silence under such circumstances carried with it an intolerably prejudicial impact.”
While
Doyle
established a constitutional rule based on the due process clause against impeachment use of a defendant’s silence while under arrest and after having received
Miranda
warnings, the Court was careful to specify that it did not consider other constitutional claims raised by the petitioners.
To this Court’s knowledge, no federal court has endeavored since Doyle to analyze the “different considerations” which are at play when the prosecutorial comment is directed towards the defendant’s general failure to come forward and give notice of his alibi prior to trial. 4 Some guidance as to *1212 the constitutional considerations at play in this situation may be gleaned, however, from the dissenting opinion in Doyle.
Justices Stevens, Blackmun, and Rehnquist, dissenting in
Doyle,
would have reached the constitutional issue reserved by the majority and at stake in this case and would have resolved this issue adversely to the petitioners. Relying primarily on the continued existence of
Raffel v. United States,
While the dissenting opinion in Doyle points toward a finding of no constitutional error in this case, we conclude that the “different considerations” present in this case do not prevent the error from attaining constitutional proportions. In fact, considerations precisely parallel to the two rationales articulated by the Doyle majority are present in this case. First, as a general matter, a defendant’s failure to come forward prior to trial with an alibi defense is certainly no less “insolubly ambiguous” than is the defendant’s silence at the time of arrest. Where the defendant has been given Miranda warnings and been thereby apprised of the fact that his statements could be used against him, where the defendant retains his fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination, and where the defendant has counsel who might well have encouraged him to say nothing to the prosecution with respect to his possible defenses, the defendant’s failure in the usual case to come forward with an alibi defense is certainly not significantly inconsistent with his testimony as to the alibi defense at trial. Moreover, while the record in this case is sparse since the prosecutor never cross-examined petitioner with respect to his failure to give the alibi defense before the trial, the record clearly demonstrates that petitioner’s trial counsel had deliberately withheld giving the prosecutor notice of the petitioner’s alibi defense. 5 Under such circumstances, petitioner’s pretrial failure to come forward with his alibi defense is of extremely questionable probative value, while its potential for prejudice can hardly be doubted.
Second, even assuming the continuing viability of the
Raffel
decision,
6
the prosecutorial comments directed towards the petitioner’s failure to come forward prior to trial with his alibi violated fundamental fairness. While this case is distinguishable from
Doyle
in that the silence addressed by
*1213
the comment was not solely that during the
post-Miranda
warning, post-arrest period, the fact that
Miranda
warnings are given and that a criminal defendant retains his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination is of continuing relevance to the fact of a defendant’s silence throughout the pretrial period. Moreover, in this specific case, the record clearly demonstrates that petitioner’s trial counsel deliberately withheld giving notice of the alibi defense and the identity of the alibi witness until the day of trial. In making this deliberate choice, the petitioner’s counsel relied on his conclusion that under
Wardius v. Oregon,
Accordingly, we hold the prosecutor’s comments in closing argument which called the jury’s attention to petitioner’s pretrial silence with respect to his alibi to be constitutional error.
HARMLESS ERROR
Notwithstanding our conclusion that the prosecutor’s comments were constitutional error, respondent contends that such error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt as required by
Chapman v. California,
The evidence presented at petitioner’s state court trial, while clearly sufficient to sustain the jury verdict of guilty,
see People
v.
Smith, supra,
In determining whether the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, the question is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the error might have contributed to the conviction.
Fahy v. Connecticut,
Accordingly, petitioner’s motion for summary judgment is granted, and the judgment of conviction is vacated. However, *1215 the writ of habeas corpus shall not issue for a period of 120 days in order to afford the State of Illinois the opportunity to initiate new trial proceedings. If petitioner is not brought to trial within 120 days from the date of this order, the writ shall issue.
An appropriate order will enter.
Dated: Aug. 21, 1979.
Notes
The date of the judgment of conviction was January 30, 1975. The Illinois Appellate Court, Second Division, affirmed the conviction on September 16, 1977,
People v. Smith,
. Since these comments can only be interpreted within the context of the full closing arguments as to the alibi defense issue, these portions of the arguments are set forth.
Initial closing argument for the prosecution:
The defense is alibi. Now, this is a very interesting alibi. I want you all to think what you would do in a situation like this, what you would do, and if you feel that this alibi was handled the way you would handle it I will be surprised.
Okay. They say that here is Melvin Smith living with Betty, that they have been living together for awhile, that he stays home on a regular basis, that he’s not working and she’s not working, so they must be getting along pretty good if you’re going to stay in because it’s.pretty tough to stay in the house day in and out. They have enough feeling for one another. They live together, play cards together, stay together even though they’re not married.
Okay. That when she finds out that he is arrested for this offense, the day she found out she claims it was Sunday, he says it was Monday, she’s a little mixed up on her days, *1209 but when she found out she didn’t turn to the police and say: ‘For Godsake, he couldn’t have done it, he was with me.’ No, this alibi couldn’t come out right then and there.
In fact, yesterday when we attempted to talk to her about an alibi she wouldn’t talk to us, she wouldn’t talk to the police officer. Melvin Smith, the same guy that wasn’t at the hearing, that hid in the back, maybe, told her not to. If you had what this is supposed to be, an ironclad alibi, you were home with your spouse, or your friend, or your buddy, or girl friend or boy friend and you knew it, one week from the day that the thing happened, had happened on a late Monday, early Tuesday, and you knew on Monday or Sunday next that he was supposed to, wouldn’t you run to the police and say: ‘Hey, look, he was with me, he didn’t do it.’
Which one of you would not? They didn’t. They had no obligation to. By the way, they have no obligation to tell us anything, but wouldn’t you, if you were innocent and if you had a loved one in trouble, run in and tell the police? You’re right, you would.
T.Tr., at 248-250.
Closing argument for the defense:
So, coupled with that we have got what Mr. Puklin refers to as the alibi defense, and legally that’s what it’s called is an alibi defense. Now, alibi has a bad connotation, or at least to me it sounds bad, alibi, but that’s what it’s called.
And sure, when I was picking you people on the jury, when Mr. Puklin was picking you I asked you questions now about what if we don’t put on any evidence, what if Melvin doesn’t testify, and that’s because that’s a very difficult choice for me to make. I put this girl on the stand, she’s never been in Court before, she’s not an experienced witness by any means. I don’t know what Mr. Puklin is going to be able to do to her, what a skillful cross examiner is going to get her to say.
I submit to you that had Mr. Puklin enough time or the desire to do so he could have had her confused about her name. But we do have her here saying: ‘I was living with Melvin, we were staying together, he was home that night.’ We have Melvin saying he was home that night. Mr. Puklin says: ‘Okay, why didn’t you tell the police? You would have all told the police.’ I have no doubt in my mind that every one of you would have gone to the police and said: ‘Hey, you get him out, he didn’t do it, he was with me.’ Well, just for a minute pretend that you’re in your early twenty’s, and you’re black, and you’re living in Aurora and you have a boy friend charged with armed robbery and you know he was with you. Are you going to the police and say: ‘Hey, that’s my boy friend, he was with me, you guys are wrong?’ Of course you’re not. It’s unfortunate, but if you’re black and you’re that age and you’re in Aurora the police are on the other side, they’re not on your side, so you don’t run to the police and tell them your story, probably would rather stay out of the whole thing.
T.Tr., at 256-57.
Rebuttal closing argument for the prosecution:
Okay. Doubt has to be a reasonable one. I think what you saw here was a man who has been identified, who has been captured and a loved one doing whatever she can to get him out of this. I believe they have both lied under oath. I don’t believe the doubt they have tried to create is a reasonable doubt in light of what you would do if you had an ironclad alibi for a loved one.
And, you know, I don’t go this bit about she being twenty years old, and black, and on Aid in Aurora and the police hate people that are black. I don’t care what color you are, if you got an ironclad alibi it doesn’t hurt to walk downtown and tell the police, they’re not going to do anything to you.
And even when the police were out there to ask her about it she wouldn’t talk — or he wouldn’t let her talk about it. That’s a curious thing. Why, why wouldn’t anybody talk about the alibi until we get to Court?
T.Tr., at 263-64.
. Petitioner does not here challenge the constitutionality of the impeachment of a defense witness by that witness’ prior silence, nor do we perceive any constitutional defect in such prosecutorial comment in this case.
See United States v. Zouras,
. In addition to failing to object to these comments on the petitioner’s pretrial silence, petitioner’s trial counsel failed to object to two other prosecutorial comments during closing argument which comments were found by the Illinois Appellate Court to have been error. See
People v. Smith, supra,
. Several federal courts have explicitly noted that the Supreme Court reserved decision in
Doyle
upon whether the defendant’s general silence in failing to come forward prior to trial with a story told at trial can be used for impeachment purposes.
United States v. Mireles,
At least one state court, relying on the reserved issues in
Doyle,
has concluded on the authority of
Raffel v. United States,
. See T.Tr., at 3-22.
. The
Raffel
decision has clearly been substantially circumscribed insofar as it is applicable in federal courts.
See United States v. Hale, supra; Stewart v. United States,
. See T.Tr., at 3-22. The argument as to the unconstitutionality was upheld in
People v. Fields,
. Respondents have also argued that the comments were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt by virtue of certain jury instructions given by the trial judge to the jury. Specifically, respondents rely upon the instructions that the jury must find petitioner guilty beyond a reasonable doubt from the evidence presented at trial, and that the arguments of counsel were not evidence. T.Tr., at 268, 275-76.
Under some circumstances, jury instructions may have a curative effect upon prior error in referring to a defendant’s silence.
See United States v. Hansen, supra,
. Since the Supreme Court’s holding in Doyle expressly reserved judgment in a case such as this one, we need not address respondents’ argument that Doyle should not be applied retroactively.
Assuming
arguendo
that the issue of
Doyle’s
retroactivity was necessary to a decision of this case, we would find
Doyle
retroactive. While no federal decision has to this Court’s knowledge yet decided the question of whether
Doyle
should be given full retroactive effect, several decisions have intimated that
Doyle
is to be considered applicable to those cases which were on appeal at the time of the
Doyle
decision. See
Chapman v. United States,
While this limited authority supports the conclusion that
Doyle
should be given retroactive effect at least to cases on direct appeal at the time of the
Doyle
decision, see
United States v. Fitzgerald,
Respondents contend, however, that the question of
Doyle’s
retroactivity should be analyzed by reference to
Tehan v. Shott,
Accordingly, were the question of retroactivity properly before us, we would hold Doyle retroactive to apply to this case.
