Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON, DUBINA and POLITZ [*] , Circuit Judges.
EDMONDSON, Circuit Judge:
This appeal involves the authority of defense counsel to decide whether to request a mistrial in a federal criminal trial. Defendant James C. Burke appeals his conviction of accepting a bribe from a government agent in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 666(a)(1)(B). We affirm.
In a case involving several different charges, a jury convicted Defendant of one: accepting a bribe from a government agent while Defendant was a local official (in return for Defendant's political influence in two bond deals). Defendant argues that he was denied еffective assistance of counsel when his defense counsel sought an Allen charge despite Defendant's request that his counsel join thе prosecutors in asking for a mistrial.
About five days after the jury had begun deliberating, the jury notified the district court that they had reached a verdiсt on all but two counts: bribery of a government official and money laundering. The government asked the district court to accept the vеrdict and to declare a mistrial on the remaining counts. Defendant says that he told his counsel that he also wanted to accept the verdict as it stood and to accept a mistrial. But Defendant's counsel instead requested the district court to instruct the jury with a modified Allen charge. After a brief discussion on the issue, the court gave the charge. Then about two hours later, the jury returned with a finding of guilty on the bribery count. The jury said that it was still hung on the * Honorable Henry A. Politz, U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, sitting by designation. Defendant raises other issues in his appeal. Specifically, he argues that the district court erred in (1) its jury instructions, (2) denying Defendant's motion for acquittal based on insufficient evidence and (3) denying Defendant's motion for severance of the trial. After reviewing these claims, we deem them to be without merit.
money laundering count; so, the court then dеclared a mistrial on that remaining count.
Defendant filed a motion in the district court for a new trial based on ineffective assistance of counsel. Defendant contended that his counsel was ineffective for disregarding defendant's request to consent to a mistrial. The сourt accepted the facts set forth in Defendant's affidavit but concluded that defense counsel was not ineffective. The trial сourt concluded that the pertinent decision about mistrial was a tactical one that defense counsel was entitled to makе. Defendant now appeals.
DISCUSSION
The Supreme Court has said that a defendant has the ultimate authority to make fundamental
decisions fоr his case. The Court has listed four decisions which it characterizes as fundamental: whether
to plead guilty, waive a jury, testify in his or her own behalf or to take an appeal.
See Jones v. Barnes,
463
U.S. 745,
Although a represented defendant does retain the absolute right to make limited choices for his case, neither the Supreme Cоurt, nor this Court, has ever expanded the narrow class to include the choice of whether to accept a mistrial or to request an charge. In the absence of case law on point, we decline to add to the list of a client's fundamental decisions. Put differently, we decline to expand the circumstances that erode defense counsel's authority at trial. Defense counsel in a criminаl trial is more than an adviser to a client with the client's having the final say at each point. He is an officer of the court and a prоfessional advocate pursuing a result—almost always, acquittal—within the confines of the law; his chief reason for being present is to еxercise his professional judgment to decide tactics.
Federal courts are "forever adding new stories to the temples of constitutional law, and the temples
have a way of collapsing when one story too many is added."
Douglas v. Jeannette,
Other circuits have been reluctant to expand the list of fundamental rights set forth by the Court in
*3
Jones
аnd, instead, seem to have construed the list as exhaustive.
See Sistrunk v. Vaughn,
The Eighth Circuit has determined that a dеcision of whether to request a mistrial in a criminal trial
is a tactical decision defense counsel can make even without consulting at all with the client.
See Walker v.
A.L. Lockhart,
In addition, in
Watkins v. Kassulke,
Also, the Seventh Circuit, addressing a different kind of ineffective assistance of counsel claim, has
described "[t]he decision whether to move for a mistrial or instead to proceed to judgment with the
expectation that the client will be acquitted [as] one of trial strategy."
Galowski v. Murphy,
We, therefore, reject Defendant's contention that the decision to request a mistrial is a fundamental
decision that only a defendant can make. For the reasons they have explained, we join the other circuits that
address this kind of issue. We conclude that the decision to refrain from asking the court for a mistrial is a
tactical decision entrusted to defense counsel, binding the defendant even when the defendant expressed a
Defendant does not argue ineffective assistance of counsel under the two-part test set out in
Strickland v. Washington,
contrary wish to his lawyer.
AFFIRMED.
