ON REMAND FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
This case was remanded to this court by the Supreme Court of the United States, — U.S. -,
Following the Supreme Court’s remand order, we invited and received supplemental briefs from the parties. We conclude that this circuit’s harmless error analysis of Sandstrom errors, and the harmless error analysis conducted by the en banc *701 court in its previous opinion in this case, follows the traditional harmless error analysis provided for in Chapman and in Rose v. Clark. For the reasons stated in our previous en banc opinion, we conclude that the Sandstrom error in this case is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Accordingly, our previous en banc opinion, which was published at
REINSTATED.
KRAYITCH, Circuit Judge, dissenting, in which FAY and EDMONDSON, Circuit Judges, and HENDERSON, Senior Circuit Judge, join:
In
Rose v. Clark,
— U.S.-,
“[i]n many cases, the predicate facts conclusively establish intent, so that no rational jury could find that the defendant committed the relevant criminal act but did not intend to cause injury.”
Id. at 3108 (emphasis in original). The Court then reasoned:
No one doubts that the trial court properly could have instructed the jury that it could infer malice from respondent’s conduct. Indeed, in the many cases where there is no direct evidence of intent, that is exactly how intent is established. For purposes of deciding this case, it is enough to recognize that in some cases that inference is overpowering. It would further neither justice nor the purposes of the Sandstrom rule to reverse a conviction in such a case.
The harmless error inquiry involves determining whether on the whole record the error is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id. at 3108-09.
Brooks is such a case in which the jury could have inferred intent to kill from Brooks’s conduct. Indeed, viewing the record as whole, there was overpowering circumstantial evidence of intent. Thus, the trial judge’s error in compelling the jury to find intent rather than allowing the jury to infer intent was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
I disagree with the en banc majority’s conclusion in its prior opinion that an issue of accident was “squarely before the jury” and that Brooks’s confession indicated that the gun went off unintentionally.
Brooks v. Kemp,
For these reasons as well as those articulated in my prior dissent, Id. at 1422, I conclude that the jury instruction was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. Accordingly, I dissent from the majority opinion.
Notes
.
Rose
v.
Clark,
478 U.S. at-,
