Kellie Myers was convicted of conspiring to firebomb the car of a black family of her neighborhood, depriving them of their civil rights in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 241. Doubts about the work of Martin H. Kinney, her lawyer at trial, led us to vacate the conviction and remand for a detailed inquiry into the constitutional adequacy of the defense he provided.
Although Myers’ vigorous appellate counsel identifies nine deficiencies in Kinney’s work, two dominate. The first is a contention that Kinney should have moved to sever Myers’ trial from that of Randall Neal. The other is the argument that Kinney should have asked for an instruction reminding the jury not to hold against Myers an oblique reference to “another person” in a statement Neal made. Because our earlier opinion sets out the facts, we can be brief.
Both Myers and Neal offered alibis. They had been together smoking and drinking the evening of October 4, 1984, and until 1:30 a.m. on October 5, they conceded, but they said they parted ways at 1:30 and did not participate in the torching that occurred 2lk hours later. The rub is that Neal had to explain away a beer can and a cigarette package, bearing his fingerprints, found near the crime. He did this by testifying that he had fetched beer for Myers, implying that if she dropped the can it was understandable that it had his prints, even though he played no role in the crime. Myers insists that a severance would have protected her from this implication.
Although the evidence was adverse to Myers, the defenses were not mutually exclusive. See
United States v. Buljubasic,
Myers’ most substantial contention is that Kinney should have asked the court to give an instruction reminding the jury not to infer anything from a mysterious reference in one of Neal’s statements. A few days after the arson, Neal told Meg McBrayer that he and Myers committed the crime together because Myers’ parents were concérned that the presence of a black family would depress property values in the neighborhood. McBrayer relayed that statement to the jury, discreetly replacing Myers’ name with “another person” but including the reference to property values. This cured any hearsay problem. There was no problem under the confrontation clause because Neal, the declarant, testified,
Although this evidence might have been the basis of an argument for severance, the district court concluded in light of Richardson that separate trials were not in the cards. Richardson allows the use of veiled references in joint trials even when the declarant does not testify; the judge thought the case for joint trial stronger when the declarant takes the stand. The trial judge best knows what would have happened had severance been requested, and the omission of a request for a boon that would not have been forthcoming (if indeed severance would have been a boon, in light of the chance that Neal would have turned up as a witness for the prosecution) is not ineffective assistance.
That leaves Kinney’s failure to seek a cautionary instruction, which may do more harm than good. You can’t instruct “Do not draw inference
X”
without informing the jurors that
X
is one possible conclusion from the evidence. To tell the jurors not to do something is to ensure that they will do it, at least for a while. (Imagine what happens if a judge intones: “For the next two hours, do not say the word ‘hippopotamus’ to yourself.”) Such an instruction still may be beneficial, for it will arm conscientious jurors with knowledge about their proper roles, and an argument to de
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ploy in the jury room if the subject arises. But reasonable persons may differ about whether the good such an instruction does with a thoughtful juror will outweigh the harm it can do by fastening attention on a link that may have been overlooked or forgotten.
Lakeside v. Oregon,
None of Myers’ remaining arguments requires separate discussion. Our first opinion expressed concern, for example, that Kinney had failed to challenge an identification that was “sharply at variance with Myers’ actual appearance.”
Kinney will not be admitted to the American College of Trial Lawyers any time soon (his performance in this court was so bad that we disbarred him), but having decided that his best chance of keeping Neal off the stand lay in a joint trial — a joint trial that was almost sure to come his way even if he had tried to engineer a separate one — Kinney was hard pressed to deal with Neal’s statement to McBrayer. He made a plausible decision; even in retrospect the district judge doubted that a different decision would have been superi- or. Other aspects of Kinney’s work can be questioned, but none creates serious doubt about the quality of the trial and verdict.
Affirmed.
