OPINION
Reives appeals his conviction of conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846. He raises the single issue of whether it was reversible error for the trial court to refuse to clarify the term “reasonable doubt” when requested to do so by the jury. We find no error, and we affirm.
I
Reives was convicted on the testimony of two co-conspirators and an undercover policeman; the policeman had no direct dealings with the defendant. Reives proposed the following instruction:
It is not required that the Prosecution prove guilt beyond all possible doubt. The test is beyond a reasonable doubt. A reasonable doubt is a doubt based upon reason and common sense — the kind of doubt that would make a reasonable person hesitate to act. Proof beyond a reasonable doubt must, therefore, be proof of such a convincing character that a reasonable person would not hesitate to rely and act upon it in the most important of his own affairs.
The jury will remember that a Defendant is never to be convicted on mere suspicion or conjecture.
In its charge to the jury, the trial court gave this instruction instead:
The government has the burden of proving every defendant in a criminal case guilty beyond a “reasonable doubt.” And if it fails to do so, you must find the defendant not guilty. While the Government’s burden of proof is a strict, or heavy burden, it is not necessary that a defendant’s guilt be proved beyond all possible doubt. It is only required that the Government’s proof exclude any “reasonable doubt” concerning a defendant’s guilt.
A “reasonable doubt” may arise either from the evidence or from a lack of evidence. As stated earlier, you must consider only the evidence that I have admitted in this case. The term “evidence” includes the testimony of witnesses, and the exhibits admitted into the record.
In the course of the instructions, the court mentioned the term “reasonable doubt” nine other times.
Shortly after the jury had begun deliberations, the foreperson sent the following note to the judge: ‘We need further clarification as to ‘reasonable doubt.’ ” The trial judge told counsel that he believed that the Fourth Circuit rule was that “the trial court should not try to define ‘reasonable doubt,”’ an assessment of the law with which the prosecutor agreed. Defense counsel noted that a jury request for clarification was a different situation than merely giving the definition “gratuitously.” The court denied the jury’s request for “further clarification” and merely reread the instruction initially given. The jury reached its verdict the next day.
II
A
Due process requires proof of every element of a crime beyond a reasonable
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doubt,
In re Winship,
B
The contours of the overall problem are visible in a Supreme Court case decided almost forty years ago. In
Holland v. United States,
C
The courts of appeals are divided about if, when, and how the concept of “reasonable doubt” should be defined.
See United States v. Nolasco,
D
It is difficult to distill a rule from orn-eases. We have never found a refusal of a party’s request for a clarifying instruction to be error. See
United States v. Woods,
E
Those courts that favor giving a definition generally cite the following as reasons for their view: (1) the meaning of the term “reasonable doubt” is
not
self-evident.
See Nolasco,
The usual reasons for discouraging definitions of reasonable doubt are that the term has a “self-evident meaning comprehensible to a lay juror” and that attempts at defining the term will probably lead to “unnecessary confusion.”
Murphy,
Ill
While we have consistently and vigorously condemned the attempts of trial courts to define reasonable doubt,
see, e.g., Moss,
The underlying premise in all of our cases is that trying to explain things will confuse matters, and we cannot see why a jury request should-change this premise. 4 If there is a definition that can clarify the meaning of reasonable doubt, common sense suggests that such a definition be offered to all juries, even those that do not venture a request. But until we find a definition that so captures the meaning of “reasonable doubt” that we would mandate its use in all criminal trials in this circuit, we cannot hold that it is error to refuse to give some definition. We note that Sullivan has increased the stakes where definitions are concerned, and we reaffirm our longstanding, albeit forgiving, proscription against any attempts to define reasonable doubt to jurors.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This footnote contains the following alignment among the federal courts of appeal: four circuits agree that failure to define is reversible, four agree that the decision to define should be left to the trial court’s discretion, and two (including the Fourth Circuit) leave the decision with the trial court but condemn the use of any definition. The state courts are similarly divided.
. This Note cites
Murphy v. Holland,
.
United States v. Porter,
. There may be times when a jury seeks further clarification of an instruction that merely contains the term “reasonable doubt." In such a situation, the trial judge should treat such inquiries in like manner as in explaining any other instruction.
