Larry Saulsbury appeals from the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. One basis for his petition and the sole basis for this appeal is his contention that he was denied a fair trial by the prosecutor’s references in cross-examination and closing argument to petitioner’s post-arrest silence. That contention was rejected by the Appellate Court of Illinois, Fourth District;
People v. Saulsbury,
Petitioner was convicted of murder. Following a quarrel over personal property in one apartment, the deceased resumed the quarrel at Saulsbury’s apartment and Saulsbury stabbed him. Defendant contended, and the jury disbelieved, that the stabbing was in self-defense.
When defendant was on the stand in his own defense his counsel asked him why he did not volunteer any explanation of the affray at the time of arrest. Saulsbury replied that the sheriff had read him his rights, stating that what he said could be used against him, and, since Saulsbury was on parole, he did not think the sheriff would believe his explanation. On cross-examination the prosecutor, by three questions, elicited the same response. He then went on to question defendant as to whether he volunteered a statement several hours later, when, while in jail, he learned from the sheriff that he was being charged with murder.
Q. He [the sheriff] didn’t specifically tell you that Cooper was dead but you obviously assumed that from the charge?
A. Yes.
Q. Now, at that point, did you talk to the Sheriff?
A. No.
(R. 782).
During closing argument the prosecutor vigorously argued that the reason defendant gave for not coming forward with his explanation the night of the stabbing could not be the reason he failed to offer it the next morning after the victim had died and defendant was in jail, charged with murder. 1 The thrust of the argument was that *653 the jury should not believe the defendant’s story because, by then, someone charged with murder would have claimed self-defense if in fact that is what had happened. Defendant did not object to the cross-examination or the closing argument until post-trial motions. The Illinois Appellate Court, however, considered the issue under the Illinois “plain error” doctrine and held that the cross-examination and closing argument were permissible.
Saulsbury contends that the District Court followed an overly expansive view of Illinois law which allows the prosecution to inquire about otherwise inadmissible prejudicial evidence if the defendant himself testifies concerning such evidence on direct examination. The State contends that we should not consider matters to which there were no objections in the absence of a showing of cause and actual prejudice.
United States v. Frady,
Doyle v. Ohio,
Although Illinois has long followed the rule that post-arrest silence cannot be the subject of cross-examination and comment,
see People v. Lewerenz,
Subsequent decisions undermined
Raffel.
In
Grunewald v. United States,
Four years later, in
Stewart v. United States,
In
United States v. Hale,
Finally, in
Jenkins v. Anderson,
This short journey through time illustrates the difficulties of balancing the need for full development of the facts through vigorous cross-examination against the protection of the Fifth Amendment privilege. Clearly, the state cannot comment upon silence when the defendant, in the exercise of his privilege, chooses not to testify at all. Clearly, the state can cross-examine and comment when a defendant, prior to his arrest, did not come forward with the exculpatory story of his trial testimony when he had both the opportunity and good reason to do so. Clearly, a defendant who remains silent for some period after he has been given
Miranda
warnings cannot have that silence adversely affect him. As in
Johnson v. United States,
If, in this case, Saulsbury, in the absence of any direct examination respecting his silence, had been questioned about his failure to volunteer his self-defense explanation the following morning, the decision would be indeed difficult. The Court in
Grünewald,
for instance — albeit in the exercise of its supervisory powers — -refused to permit questioning about silence long after arrest. The decisions have, at the same time, recognized that silence well subsequent to any
Miranda
warnings pose different considerations,
Doyle v. Ohio,
426 U.S. at fn. 6, 96 S.Ct. at fn. 6, presumably because “[sjilence gains more probative weight where it persists in the face of accusation
....’’ United States v. Hale,
Here, however, it was the defense which initiated the inquiry. As pointed out by Justice Stevens in his dissent in
Doyle,
The defendant was not content to leave it to what the jury might infer, without help from anyone. The direct examination, by assigning a reason for silence immediately after arrest, chose to indicate to the jury that silence had probative weight and removed that subject from the realm of insoluble ambiguity about which there could be no comment. Having ventured that far, the defense could not erect a constitutional barrier against the state exploring the soundness of that explanation by measuring it against the defendant’s subsequent failure to assert it the following morning, when the accusations had become far more serious.
The prosecution’s closing argument is, however, particularly troublesome because of its ambiguity. Just as in
Doyle v. Ohio, supra,
the comments upon defendant’s silence were a permissible attack upon credibility and also an impermissible attack upon innocence. “Comment on the lack of credibility of the defendant is plainly proper; it is not proper, however, for the prosecutor to ask the jury to draw a direct inference of guilt from silence — to argue, in effect, that silence is inconsistent with innocence.”
Id.
... But since the two inferences — perjury and guilt — are inextricably intertwined because they have a common source it would be unrealistic to permit comment on the former but to find reversible error in the slightest reference to the latter. In the context of the entire argument and the entire trial, I am not persuaded that the rather sophisticated distinction between permissible comment on credibility and impermissible comment on an inference of guilt justifies a reversal of these state convictions.
Id.
at 635-36,
The District Court’s judgment denying habeas corpus is affirmed.
Notes
. “Now, it’s also uncontested that the defendant never said a word about the bottle, didn’t say a word about self-defense even after he found out he was charged with murder, that Cooper was dead and he was going to be charged with murder.” (R. 837)
* * * * * *
“We trust you gentlemen and ladies recall where he [the defendant] was when he was arrested. He was sitting at Liz Beatty’s. Remember his testimony? Sheriff came in — I believe he referred to him as “Bill” — came in, gave my Miranda warning, but he didn’t talk to him. Okay, at that point he doesn’t have to voluntarily go to the Sheriff’s office. The Sheriff’s got him. Wants to make a clean breast of things. What’s a better time?” (R. 848-849)
“The next morning I believe the defendant testified was 8:00 o’clock when he first found out that John Cooper was dead and he was going to be charged with murder. Well what else can happen to you? You, ladies and gentlemen, are reasonable citizens. Maybe none of you have *653 ever been on parole or have the same reasons to be fearful of law enforcement authorities that Mr. Saulsbury might. What else can happen to you once you’re charged with murder? You’re in jail. You’re not going to get away. If you have anything to tell anyone at that point, whether you trust law enforcement people or not, that’s going to help you, you’re going to tell it to them. Did he say anything at 8:00 o’clock the next morning? Nothing.” (R. 849)
****** “[A]fter he’s arrested, after they tell him he’s charged with murder he still lets them stumble around in the dark.” (R. 850)
******
“He has a constitutional right his counsel said not to say anything. He exercised that constitutional right. That’s true. He also has a constitutional right not to testify. He chose not to exercise that constitutional right. - He sat up there and testified. The difference? Maybe at this point he’s convinced hey, if I don’t say anything I don’t have any chance at all. What we ask you to do ladies and gentlemen, we’re not certainly choosing to attack the defendant for exercising his constitutional rights, is to think what you would have done. You may never have been on parole, but after all this doesn’t matter at all. You have not been arrested. It’s not a matter that you’ve been arrested. You’re not going anywhere anyway. The next morning you have been charged with murder or informed you’re going to be charged with murder. I don’t care what you say about parole or anything else at that point in time you’re going to tell what’s going to help you.” (R. 889)
******
“[W]e would like to leave you with the thought that in order to believe Larry Saulsbury the defendant, and you have to believe him or he’s guilty ... you have to disbelieve that an innocent party would have acted the same way that Mr. Saulsbury did in not telling anyone about his defense until he took the stand here for trial even after he had been arrested. You have to disbelieve all of those things.” (R. 893)
