Thе United States appeals an order of the District Court granting a new trial to Arthur Blumeyer and John Peckham on the basis of a juror’s misconduct. We reverse, reinstate the jury’s verdicts, and remand for sentencing.
After a four-week trial ending in six days of deliberations, a jury convicted Blumeyer and Peckham of wire fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1343 (1988), mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371. The jury also convicted Blumeyеr of multiple counts of money laundering in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956. Upon the request of both defendants, the District Court conducted a poll of jurors. All of the jurors confirmed the verdicts. Juror 9, however, “paused for a long moment before announcing her agreement with the verdicts against Mr. Peckham, and she appeared close to tears,” but “she clearly stated that the announced convictions were her ‘true and correct’ verdicts.” United States v. Blumeyer, No. 4:93CR68, Mem. & Order at 3 (E.D.Mo. Aug. 30, 1994) (Mem. & Order).
The following day Juror 9 called Peckham to tell him that she regretted the verdicts against him. Peckham asked Juror 9 to contact his attorney, and Peckham’s attorney notified the District Court of Juror 9’s communications. On February 15, 1994, the court interviewed Juror 9. During the interview, Peckham’s attorney asked Juror 9 whether any juror had consulted an outside source during the deliberations. Juror 9 said that the jury foreman had asked “an attorney friend of his, just on a question оf law” and that the foreman mentioned the contact in the context of a discussion among the jurors. 1 *1015 Sealed Transcript of Feb. 15,1994, Interview at 12. She could not remember what the foreman had said about the contact and noted, “I didn’t pay a lot of attention to him anyway.” Id. Juror 9 also said that when the foreman started discussing his contact with an attorney some of the jurors were getting coffee and not listening to the foreman. Additionally, some of the jurors who were listening were apparently upset by the foreman’s contact with an attorney and admonished the foreman for violating the District Court’s instructions. Based on this interview the District Court granted Peck-ham’s motion for leave to interview the other petit jurors.
Jurors 10, 11, and 12 largely corroborated Juror 9’s statements regarding the foreman’s contact with an attorney. Like Juror 9, they did not remember the subject of the question the fоreman said he had posed. Juror 4’s memory of the foreman’s statement was similar to that of Jurors 10, 11, and 12 except that she believed that the comment related to the legality of starting a corporation with insufficient capital. Juror 4, however, also said at least ten times that she really couldn’t remember the subject of the question. In response to a query from the court regarding the level of her certainty, she replied, “I’m uncеrtain about what it was that [the foreman] checked on [with the attorney].” Sealed Transcript of June 10, 1994 Hearing at 14. Jurors 4 and 11 described the subject of the foreman’s conversation with the attorney as a “hypothetical question” or “things in general ... [n]ot specific to the case.” Id. at 26, 15. Juror 3, while recalling that the foreman mentioned a conversation with an attorney, could not remember whether the foreman’s comment related to the case at all. Jurors 1, 2, 5, 6, and 8 did not remember the foreman discussing a conversation with an attorney at any time during the deliberations. The court interviewed the foreman on two separate occasions, and the foreman denied having discussed with an attorney any of the substantive issues in the case, either directly or through hypothetical questions.
After interviewing all of the jurors, the court found “the Foreperson posed a hypothetical question to an attorney about substantive issues in the ease” that “were material to Defendant’s guilt or innocence.” Mem. & Order at 10,15. The court declined to characterize the “substantive issues” as either legal or factual.
Id.
at 13 n. 4. The court further found that the admonitions of the other jurors “prevented the Foreperson from relating fully the information he had received.”
Id.
at 10. Based on these findings, the court held that the lаw required it to presume that the contact was prejudicial to the defendants.
Id.
at 13. The court concluded that the
government
had not rebutted the presumption and granted Blumeyer’s and Peckham’s motions for a new trial. We will reverse a district court’s decision to grant a new trial only when that decision constitutes an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Estrada, 45
F.3d 1215, 1225 (8th Cir.1995),
petition for cert. filed,
No. 94-8972 (April 24, 1995). A discretionary decision based on a clearly erroneous finding of fact constitutes an abuse of the trial court’s discretion.
Waible v. McDonald’s Corp.,
The District Court’s order relies on
Remmer v. United States,
[i]n a criminal case, any private communication, contact, or tampering, directly or indirectly, with a juror during a trial about the matter pending before the jury is, for obvious reasons, deemed presumptively prejudicial.... The presumption is not conclusive, but the burden rests heavily upon the Government to establish, after notice to and hearing of the defendant, that such contact with the juror was harmless to the defendant.
Remmer,
The government argues that in this case there is no evidencе to support the District Court’s finding of an extrinsic contact on a substantive matter in the case, either factual or legal. We'agree. The juror interviews revealed absolutely nothing that would warrant a finding that the improper contact between the foreman and an attorney related to a substantive issue in the case. It is telling that the District Court made no firm finding of fact regarding the subject matter of the hypothetical question pоsed to the attorney. At most, the testimony of the jurors tends to show that the foreman contacted an attorney and asked a hypothetical question about something. One juror described the question as a question of law. The District Court’s finding that “the Foreperson posed a hypothetical question to an attorney about substantive issues in the case,” is unsupported by the testimony of the jurors, which is the only evidence in the record on this issuе. We hold that the court’s finding is clearly erroneous, and thus the factual predicate necessary for the court to presume prejudice was absent.
Even if the extrinsic contact related to a substantive issue in the case, the government argues that the improper contact concerned only a point of law. In response to the government’s argument, Blumeyer and Peckham argue that the “use of the labels ‘legаl’ or ‘factual’, is not helpful” in determining whether an extraneous contact is presumptively prejudicial. . Blumeyer’s Brief at 31; Peckham’s Brief at 33. This, Court, however, has found the distinction between factual and legal issues to, be legally significant as well as helpful.
See Cheyenne,
The government argues that the only available evidence of the foreman’s improper contact with an attorney shows that the contact related to a question, or questions, of law. Blumeyer and Peckham, on the other hand, contend that the extrinsic contact relates to factual issues to be decided by the jury and, therefore, forms the proper predicate for the invocation of the presumption .of prejudice. They cite the District Court’s finding that the contact related to “substantive issues in the case,” Mem. & Order at 13, in support of their argument that the contact was related to factual issues. We note, however, that the District Court specifically refused to “classify the extrinsic information obtained by the Foreperson as clearly factual or legal in nature.” Mem. & Order at 13 n. 4.
Having reviewed the record, we conclude that the only evidence of the extraneous information presented to the jury clearly indicates that the information, if it related at all to a substantive issue in the case, related to a point of law. In
Cheyenne
a juror consulted a dictionary to clarify words used in the trial court’s instructions.
Cheyenne,
Blumeyer and Peckham have not presented evidence sufficient to prove that the foreman’s improper contact resulted in any actual prejudice. The facts of this case are closely analogous to the facts of
Estrada.
In
Estrada,
a juror contacted a county public defender and asked whether it was legal for police officers to execute a search warrant without having the document in their possession and without showing the warrant to occupants of the building to be searched. We held that this contact was not prejudicial,, in part because the public defender had no knowledge of the facts of the case.
Estrada,
Finally, even if the presumption of prejudice had been warranted in the instant case, we note that the government overcame the presumption by proving that the contact was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The District Court correctly stated the objective test that is used to assess whether the extraneous information would likely affect a typical juror when the government must overcome a presumption of prejudice. Mem.
&
Order at 12 (citing
United States v. Simpson,
Despite having correctly stated the test and the relevant factors, the District Court failed tо weigh adequately those factors. The court held that “the weight of evidence is merely one factor to consider. Other relevant factors include the fact that the extraneous information was material to Defendants’ guilt or innocence, that it came from a lawyer, and that it was available at least to the Foreperson throughout most of the deliberation.” Mem. & Order at 14-15. The court’s memorandum and order gives no indication that it actually assessed the strength of the government’s case and balanced it against the factors tending to show prejudice. Having reviewed the record, we conclude that the evidence of Blumeyer’s and Peekham’s guilt was overwhelming and outweighs any prejudice that could have been caused by the foreman’s improper contact with an attorney.
We also note the District Court’s apparent failure to consider other relevant factors that weigh in favor of a finding of harmlessness. At worst the extrinsic information was received by less than half of the jurors and was not discussed or considered by the jury at all. Moreover, the District Court’s finding that the contact was material to the defendants’ guilt or innocence is clearly erroneous for the same reason that the finding that the information related to a substantive issue in the case is clearly erroneous. See supra at 1016. No testimony regarding the improper contact suggests that the contact related to the facts of the case. In the circumstances of this case, a complete weighing of the relevant factors, including the government’s overwhelming evidence of guilt, results in the inescapable conclusion that the improper contact between the foreman and a lawyer was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The District Court erred by concluding that the government had not successfully rebutted the presumption of prejudice.
In sum, we hold that the District Court clearly erred in finding that the foreman’s contact with an attorney related to substantive issues in the case and was thus presumptively prejudicial. Even if the extrinsic contact related to a substantive issue, it concerned only a point of law, and the court should not have presumed рrejudice. We further hold that Blumeyer and Peckham have not shown that they were actually prejudiced by the contact. Alternatively, the District Court erroneously concluded that the government failed to rebut the presumption of prejudice by proving harmlessness because the court failed to weigh all of the relevant factors and improperly weighed those factors it considered.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the order granting Blumeyer and Peckham a new trial and reinstate the jury’s verdicts. The case is remanded to the District Court for sentencing.
HENLEY, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
As an initial matter, I agree with the majority that this case should be analyzed in accordance with
United States v. Cheyenne,
In
Cheyenne,
we wrote, “where ... the jury simply supplements the court’s instructions of law ... it remains within the province of the judge to determine whether this conduct distorted the jury’s understanding of the law to the prejudice of the defendant.”
Cheyenne,
Here, the majority determines “Blumeyer and Peckham have not presented evidence sufficient to prove that the foreman’s improper contact resulted in any actual prejudice.” I disagree, since I do not believe this court can better make that determination.
Determining whether actual prejudice results from an extraneous influence is not a simple black and white proposition since up to a point Fed.R.Evid. 606(b) precludes courts “from investigating the subjective effects of any extrinsic material on the jurors, whether such effects might be shown to affirm or negate the conclusion of actual prejudice. ...”
United States v. Bassler,
In my view, because the inquiry into actual prejudice is both objective and fact intensive, the district court is better equiрped to handle it. We have plainly acknowledged the institutional advantages district courts possess in extraneous influence cases. “We give substantial weight to the trial court’s appraisal of the prejudicial effects of extraneous information on the jury, since the trial judge has the advantages of close observation of the jurors and intimate familiarity with the issues at trial.”
Cheyenne,
Accordingly, instead of reversing and reinstating the jury’s verdict, I would remand this case to the district court and allow it to determine, in accordance with Cheyenne, whether appellees were actually prejudiced by the foreman’s contact with the outside attorney during deliberations.
Notes
. Blumeyer and Peckham, along with the District Court, draw inferences regarding the subject of the foreman's inquiry from the discussion occurring in the jury room at the time the foreman
*1015
revealed his improper contact. Juror 9’s testimony regarding that discussion clearly falls within thе proscription of Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b). Rule 606(b) bars the use of testimony concerning a juror's mental process, and we will not consider the portions of Juror 9’s testimony that describe her mental process or the deliberations of other jurors. Evidentiary decisions of a district court ordinarily will not be disturbed unless the decision constitutes an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Ballew,
. In a post-trial proceeding Juror 9 testified that during deliberations, she and some other jurors wanted to know whether Blumeyer, alone, could be convicted of a conspiracy. She further testified that a day or two later, the foreman told her and a few other jurors that he had recently talked to an attorney and asked, hypothetically, whether only one co-defendant can be convicted of a conspiracy. In different ways, the testimony of Jurors 4, 10, 11, and 12, as well as the foreman's testimony, corroborated Juror 9’s testimony.
The majority, in its footnote 1, turns a blind eye toward Juror 9’s testimony, deeming it inadmissible under Fed.R.Evid. 606(b). It therefore agrees with the government that "there is no evidence to support the District Court’s finding of an extrinsic contact on a substantive matter in this case.” I cannot agree with this position. Juror 9's testimony, in my view, is narrowly admissible regarding "the question whether extraneous prejudicial information was improperly brought to the jury’s attention, or whether any outside influence was improperly brought to bear upon any juror.” Fed.R.Evid. 606(b);
see United States
v.
Krall,
