Jеrmaine Stelwagen Wright, appellant, was convicted by a jury in the Circuit Court for Worcester County (Groton, J.) of first degree murder, robbery, sodomy, assault and battery. He was sentenced to a term of life imprisonment for the murder conviction, a consecutive term of fifteen years imprisonment for the robbery conviction, and a consecutive term of ten years imprisonment for the sodomy conviction. The sentences for the assault and battery convictions were merged. Appellant presents one question on appeal:
Did the trial court err in denying his motion for a mistrial after the jury read two newspaper articles about him which contained prejudicial material?
FACTS
On June 14, 1995, sixteen-year-old Krista Ruggles and her friend, Tera Charles, went to the Night-Light Under Twenty-One Dance Club (Night-Light) in Ocean City, Maryland. Ruggles, a Pennsylvania resident, was in Ocean City for “June week.” While Ruggles and Charles were at the club, appellant approached Ruggles and danced with her. After the girls left the club, they walked northward on the boardwalk. At 15th Street, they saw appellant. Appellant offered them a ride to their hotel. The girls accepted and appellant drove them to the Dunes Manor Hotel, where Ruggles was staying. He told the girls that his name was Jermaine. They reached the hotel at approximately 3:45 a.m. At the hotel, appellant told Charles that he wanted to talk to Ruggles for ten
Charles waited for Ruggles in the hotel lobby. At 4:00 a.m., Charles went outside and looked for Ruggles, but did not see her. Charles waited in the lobby until 5:30 a.m., then went to Ruggles’s room. Ruggles did not return. Later that morning, Charles filed a missing persons report with the police.
Whaleysville is a village located between Ocean City and Salisbury. On June 19, 1995, a woman who was biking on Fooks Road near Whaleysville noticed something pink approximately twenty-five feet off the road. Closer inspection revealed the body of a teen-aged girl. The body was subsequently identified as that of Krista Ruggles.
The area where Ruggles’s body was found was located approximately ten to fifteen miles west of Ocean City and fifteen to twenty miles east of Salisbury. The area was “a couple of miles” from Route 50. David Collins, a forensic investigator with the Maryland Medical Examiner’s Office, stated, however, that “it’s not a straight shot” from Route 50, and that one would have to “go up and around” to get to that location.
An autopsy was performed on June 20, 1995. Dr. David Fowler, the assistant medical examiner, estimated that Rug-gles had been killed between three days to one week previously, with four days previously being the most likely time of death. He determined that death had been caused by manual strangulation and blunt force injuries to the head. He stated, however, that the primary cause of death was manual strangulation. Fowler further stated that toxicology tests performed on the body were consistent with an ejaculation of prostatic fluid in or nеar the anus.
Corporal Robert McQueeney of the Maryland State Police interviewed appellant on June 20,1995. Appellant told Corporal McQueeney that he lived with roommates and his girl
During the interview, appellant stated that he had been to the Night-Light dance club that night and had danced with Ruggles. He acknowledged that, sometime around 3:00 a.m. or 3:30 a.m., he had given Ruggles and Charles a ride to their hotel.
Initially, when Corporal McQueeney asked appellant what had happened, appellant told the corporal that he had dropped both girls off at their hotel and that they went inside. When Corporal McQueeney asked again what had happened, appellant said that Ruggles had said that she wanted to talk to him, and her friend said that she would meet Ruggles in the room.
According to Corporal McQueeney, appellant told him that they talked for a while, then went to the McDonald’s restaurant at 32nd or 33rd Street. Corporal McQueeney stated that appellant told him at one point that they had driven around for about ten minutes first, and at another point, he had said that they went directly to the McDonald’s.
The corporal testified that appellant also told him the following: there were people going inside and out of the McDonald’s, and he waved to people although he did not know any of them. Ruggles exited the car and saw a man named Brian, whom she knew from Pennsylvania. Ruggles spoke with Brian, a black man, slim, about six feet tall. Appellant waited for about fifteen minutes.
Corporal McQueeney testified that appellant told him that he “went back down Coastal, he rode around the inlet, up
According to Corporal McQueeney, appellant told him that he had wanted Ruggles to buy him something to eat and to buy gas. The corporal stated that appellant told him he did not have sexual intercourse with Ruggles because “he was just going to wait, it was too late to try anything.” Corporal McQueeney also testified that appellant “bragged that he could sell anyone anything and that he ripped people off’ at work.
Anthony Hasting, the manager of the McDonald’s restaurant at the time of the incident, testified that the McDonald’s restaurant closed and the doors were locked at 2:00 a.m. He testified that, if anyone was outside the building after the doors were locked, the police would bе called to remove them. Hastings further testified that the drive-in window was closed at 3:00 a.m.
John Dolch, an employee at the Eastern Correctional Institution, and appellant’s former high school wrestling coach, visited appellant in jail on June 20, 1995. Dolch wore a body wire for the State Police. Dolch asked appellant what had occurred between him and Ruggles. Dolch testified that, to his recollection, appellant told him that Ruggles had gone inside the McDonald’s restaurant and that she was talking to a white man named Brian there. During cross-examination, defense counsel and Dolch read a portion of the transcript of the conversation between Dolch and appellant. The transcript revealed that appellant had not said that Ruggles had gone inside the restaurant, but that he said she spoke to a man named Brian in the parking lot. The transcript indicated that appellant had, in fact, told Dolch that Brian was white.
Antonio Lewis testified that he had been appellant’s cellmate at thе Worcester County Jail. According to Lewis, one day shortly before appellant’s trial, appellant told him that he
once he went to drop her off, they got into an argument and fussing and fighting, and she wouldn’t get out, he said he just pulled off. And he didn’t say directly where they went at, [sic] but he said they got there, he stopped the car and they continued to fuss. And he said he smacked her.
Appellant also told Lewis that, after he “smacked” the girl, “It just happened.” When Lewis asked appellant, “What happened?” appellant “just looked at [him] and said, ‘It happened.’ ” Lewis further testified that appellant told him that he had driven around until he could figure out what to do, and that he was late getting home.
THE PROCEEDINGS
Prior to trial, appellant made a motion in limine to preclude disclosure to the jury of the fact that appellant had previously been convicted of sodomy and to preclude evidence of other bad acts, “such as bruises and rough treatment of his prior girlfriends.” The State did not oppose the motion, and the trial court granted it. Apparently, as exhibits to the motion, appellant submitted newspaper articles.
The first article reported that appellant had been arrested and charged with the murder, but that because of a lack of evidence, the State’s Attorney had dropped the charges in January 1996. The article then recounted appellant’s criminal history. It stated, in pertinent part:
In May 1997, [appellant] was working for [a pool] company in Greensboro, N.C., when he was charged with two counts of statutory rape and indecent liberties with a child after allegedly raping a 15-year-old girl in his apartment there.
Wright was found guilty in January 1998 of the indecent liberties charge, a felony in North Carolina involving lewd*250 and lascivious acts on a person under the age of 16. The jury сould not agree on a verdict for the rape charge.
The assistant district attorney planned to try him again on that charge, but a plea bargain was reached and Wright pleaded guilty to two more counts of indecent liberties with a child. He was sentenced to a minimum of 57 months and a maximum of 69 months in prison.
In addition to the North Carolina conviction, Wright has previous convictions for a fourth-degree sex offense in 1993 and for a perverted sex practice in 1994. In the 1994 case, he allegedly grabbed a girl by the throat and demanded sex at her home in Salisbury. He was charged with rape, sex offense by suffocation and numerous other sexual charges, but was only found guilty of the perverted practice charge and sentenced to one year in jail.
The article then stated that appellant was again indicted on the current charges in September 1997 and set forth the charges against him.
The second article stated that appellant had previously been charged with the crimes for which he was being tried, but that the charges had been dropped at that time because of insufficient evidence. The article stated, in part:
[Appellant’s] attorney, W. Burton Anderson, is expected to ask the judge to suppress references to [appellant’s] criminal history or his relationships with former girlfriends.
The trial proceeded against appellant and, the jury, in due course, retired to deliberate. At some point during the deliberations, the jury sent the trial court a note asking, “Would the jury be wrong to consider Defendant’s Evidence 1 and 2 in this case?” The exhibits referred to were two newspaper articles about appellant.
The trial court had the jury return to the courtroom. Upon their return, the trial court stated:
Ladies and gentlemen, the reason that I brought you back into the courtroom is because I received a note which indicated “Would the jury be wrong to consider Defendant’s evidence 1 and 2 in this case?” 1 and 2 obviously were*251 newspaper articles that were inadvertently sent back to the jury room. They were marked as Defendant’s 1 and 2 in a pretrial hearing, were not admitted into evidence in this particular case, and should not have been sent back to the jury room.
What I need to do at this time is to find out whether, in fact, anybody on the jury read the substance of the articles. If you did, please raise your hand.
The trial court noted that every juror had read the articles. In response to a question by the trial court, the jury foreman told him that they had read the articles individually. The following then occurred:
THE COURT: Well, what I’ll do is this, as I just indicated, you all understand that these are — what is contained in these articles are not evidence in this case. They should not be considered in any fashion, in any manner whatsoever by you all in arriving at your decision.
They should not be discussed and they can’t be considered.
Do you all understand that?
JURY ARRAY: (Answering in the affirmative).
THE COURT: What I am going to do is ask each individual juror whether they [sic] are going to be able to continue on with their deliberations, put what they read in these articles out of their mind, and make their decision based solely on the evidence that is presented in the courtroom.
The trial court proceeded to ask eaсh juror whether he or she could do so. Each juror replied that he or she could. The State’s Attorney requested the trial court to further instruct the jury to report any attempted discussion of the articles. The following occurred:
THE COURT: Mr. Taylor, as foreperson there’s been a request. You all have represented that you won’t consider any substance of these articles and won’t discuss it. If, in fact, for some reason a juror does bring it up and wishes to discuss it, if you would notify me by note, I would request that you do that.
*252 THE FOREPERSON: Your Honor, when I discovered it, I said I don’t think we should be discussing this anymore, and we stopped at that point. We never discussed it to start with. We were just amazed to see it.
The jury then returned to their deliberations. Defense counsel requested a mistrial. The trial court responded to the request by stating:
Well, I am impressed by the fact that they notified us that they had them, and therefore, probably realized it was improper, something that they shouldn’t consider.
Based on that, they notified the [cjourt. And I found them to be believable when they said that they — even though they read them, they would not consider them, they would decide the case only on the testimony and evidence presented in court.
For that reason, I will deny your motion for a mistrial.
The jury subsequently found appellant guilty of all charges. The record does not indicate how long the jury deliberated after reading the articles. However, when the jury announced that it had reached a verdict, the judge thanked the alternates for their patience, noting that they had sat in the conference room “for these last four or five hours.”
DISCUSSION
Appellant contends that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial. Quoting from Rainville v. State,
Whether to grant a mistrial is a decision vested in the sound discretion of the trial judge, who can best weigh the danger of prejudice arising from any alleged impropriety within the context of the entire case, and who is, therefore, in the best position to determine if a mistrial is warranted.
Stewart v. State,
The fundamental rationale in leaving the matter of prejudice vel non to the sound discretion of the trial judge is that the judge is in the best position to evaluate it. The judge is physically on the scene, able to observe matters not usually reflected in a cold record. The judge is able to ascertain the demeanor of the witnesses and to note the reaction of the jurors and counsel to inadmissible matters. That is to say, the judge has his [or her] finger on the pulse of the trial.
State v. Hawkins,
The potency of the Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial relies on the promise that a defendant’s fate will be determined by an impartial fact finder who depends solely on the evidence and argument introduced in open court. Indeed, the notion that a jury’s verdict shall be based exclusively on the evidence offered at trial goes to the fundamental integrity of all that is embraced in the constitutional concept of trial by jury.
Allen v. State,
In Maryland, when a party alleges that he or she was denied a fair trial by virtue of a newspaper article, the party
Several courts have considered, with varying conclusions, the effect of jurors having read newspaper articles regarding cases over which they presided. One annotator has commented:
It has been stated that the test in determining whether a new trial, mistrial, or reversal should be granted in a criminal action upon a showing that the jurors have read newspaper accounts of the trial depends upon whether or not a fair trial, under the circumstances, has been interfered with. There is not one rule, however, which defines just what does or does not so interfere. The inquiry, therefore, must center primarily around the facts in each case, and the ultimate decision rests in the sound judicial discretion of the court.
Andrea G. Nadel, Annotation, Juror’s Reading of Newspaper Account of Trial in State Criminal Case During its Progress as Ground for Mistrial, New Trial, or Reversal,
Courts that have been faced with this issue have considered severаl factors in determining whether exposure to newspaper accounts have interfered with a defendant’s right to a fair trial. These factors include the nature of the information and the actions of the trial court in minimizing the effect of the unauthorized information. At least two courts have suggested that a juror’s failure to heed the admonition of the trial court not to read articles about the case indicated a lack of responsibility on the part of the juror. Other courts have considered the strength of the other evidence against the defendant in
A. The Nature of the Information
We do not read the State’s brief as seriously suggesting that the information of appellant’s prior convictions and the prior allegations against him were not prejudicial, but rather that the jurors were not influenced by it. We agree with the United States Court of Appeals in United States v. Williams,
1. Requiring Reversal of Conviction
Several cases dealing with the effect of one or more jurors learning of a defendant’s prior convictions have held that the nature of the information interfered with the defendant’s right to a fair trial.
One such case is Marshall v. United States,
The United States Supreme Court reversed the conviction. It acknowledged that “[t]he trial judge has a large discretion in ruling on the issue of prejudice resulting from the reading by jurors of news articles concerning the trial.” Id. at 312,
A similar result was reached in People v. Holloway,
In assessing the necessity of a new trial, the California Supreme Court stated the “well settled” rule that “such juror misconduct raises a presumption of prejudice that may be rebutted by proof that no prejudice actually resulted.” Id. at 1332 (citations omitted). Finding no factor to rebut that presumption, the court reversеd the defendant’s conviction.
In People v. Hryciuk,
2. Reversal Not Warranted
In other cases, courts have found no error in the denial of a mistrial based on jurors having read, during trial, newspaper articles regarding a defendant’s priоr record.
Upholding that decision, the Illinois Supreme Court stated that, “[t]o warrant a reversal, it must reasonably appear that the jurors, or at least some of them, have been influenced or prejudiced to the extent that they cannot be fair and impartial.” Id. at 813. The court found evidence of such influence or prejudice to be lacking in that case.
In United States v. Bass,
Eight of the jurors had not seen the article. One had seen only the name “Jones.” A second had seen the headline. A third had seen the headline and first paragraph and a fourth had read the article. The appellate court acknowledged that thе information in the article was prejudicial and not appropriate for the jury’s consideration.
The court noted that, although the nature of the article was the most important consideration, there were others. It noted that the information concerned only other offenses rather than evidence suppressed in the case on trial. The court also noted that the information had not been given to the newspaper by the prosecutor. The court held that, under the circumstances, the trial court’s denial of the motion for a mistrial was not an abuse of discretion.
People v. Bassett,
1. Trial Court Entitled To Rely On Jurors’ Assurances
In many of the cases in which jurors’ knowledge of extraneous prejudicial information was held not to require reversal of a defendant’s conviction, the appellate court’s decision was based on its conclusion that the trial court was entitled to rely on jurors’ assurances that they would be able to reach a verdict based only on the evidence at trial.
For example, in State v. Hunter,
In Harrison v. State,
In State v. Harris,
In Pacheco v. State,
The Nevada Supreme Court noted thаt the articles were factual and objective “and not expressly intended to arouse community emotions.” Id. at 102 (citation omitted). The court took cognizance of the fact that the information about the co-defendant’s guilty plea was not sufficiently prejudicial to require a new trial. The court further commented that the jurors had been repeatedly admonished not to form an opinion until the case was submitted to them.
In determining that the defendant’s fight to a fair trial had not been violated by the jurors reading the articles, the court noted that the jurors had not been exposed repeatedly and in depth to the news accounts. The court stated that, while it is advisable for the trial court to caution the jury not to read or listen to news accounts, under the circumstances of that case, it believed the jurors “gave heed to the instruction of the court not to form an opinion until the case was finally submitted to them.”
The Illinois Appellate Court affirmed the decision of the trial court. The appellate court found that the dialogue with the juror “clearly indicate[d] his ability to be fair and impartial.” Bassett,
2. Jurors’ Assurances Insufficient
a. Unavailability of voir dire procedure
In some cases, the circumstances of the jurors learning of the prejudicial material rendered the court unable to conduct an appropriate voir dire. Under those circumstances, the courts have reversed convictions because of the jurors’ knowledge of extraneous prejudicial information.
In Basiliko v. State,
the civil suit, both as filed and as truthfully reported, could have left no doubt in anyone’s mind that the well known, highly respected, competent and experienced judicial officer who was one of the plaintiffs in the civil suit believed [appellant] guilty of conduct of the very kind with which he was charged in the criminal case. It amounted almost to a finding by him on the very questions on which the jury would have to pass in determining whether [appellant] was guilty.
Id. at 264,
The importance of the voir dire was also recognized in Hughes v. State,
The purpose of voir dire examination is to provide the court with sufficient information to decide whether prospective jurors can render an impartial verdict based on the evidence developed at trial and in accordance with the applicable*265 law.... Because demeanor plays a crucial role in the determination of impartiality, the trial judge is in a unique position to evaluate jurors’ assurances of impartiality.... The brief voir dire inquiry conducted here, directed generally at a group of 112 persons, did not allow an opportunity to observe the demeanor of any one juror.
Id. at 1041-42 (citations omitted).
In People v. Holloway,
Our conclusion might have been different had the misconduct been revealed in time for the court to have taken corrective steps to cure it through admonition or by other prophylactic measures.
Id.
It should be noted that the Holloway court concluded that the presumption of prejudice “may be rebutted by proof that no prejudice actually resulted.” Id.
b. Jurors’ assurances of impartiality ineffective
In other cases, courts have concluded that, despite jurors’ assurances that they can be fair and impartial, the information contained in a news report was sufficiently prejudicial to warrant reversal of the defendant’s convictions.
In United States v. Williams,
The effect of exposure to extrajudicial reports on a juror’s deliberations may be substantial even though it is not perceived by the juror himself [or herself], and a juror’s good faith cannot counter this effect. For that reason, we have recognized that such assurances from jurors may not be adequate to eliminate the harm done by a news report.
Williams,
Similarly, in People v. Hryciuk,
In People v. Keegan,
In State v. Roman,
In Marshall v. United States,
C. Other Evidence
In addition, in determining whether a defendant had been prejudiced by the information, the trial court may consider whether the evidence was so overwhelming that the jury could not have reasonably reached any verdict other than a conviction. See, e.g., Arndt v. State,
In People v. Holloway,
D. Number of Jurors
To some extent, the number of jurors who have read the prejudicial information may be relevant. In Allen v. State,
E. Misconduct on the Part of Jurors
Another factor that has been considered is whether the extraneous information reached the jurors because someone had failed to heed the trial court’s admonition not to read news accounts of the trial, rendering the reliability of that juror suspect. As the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania explained in Commonwealth v. Williams,
The jur[or] who read the newspaper article was sufficiently impressed by the account to discuss it with a fellow juror whо had not seen it. Having thus so flagrantly disregarded the trial court’s instructions not to read accounts of the trial or to discuss the trial with anyone, even other jurors, until the case was committed to them, we cannot agree with the majority of the Superior Court that these two jurors could, would, and did adhere to the court’s admonition to disregard the newspaper account that additional evidence [of] guilt was available but not being offered, and, most importantly, that the petitioner had been convicted previously of this same offense which conviction was reversed because of a “technicality”, [sic]
A similar view was expressed in People v. Rogers,
Another consideration is the fact that none of the jurors informed the court of [the juror’s] action until after the verdict was rendered. This may be indicative of a lack of appreciation for their responsibility as jurors.
(Citations omitted.)
However, the fact that the jurors were not disobedient in learning the prejudicial information is not determinative.
APPLICATION TO THE PRESENT CASE
The present case is a difficult one because of the similarity of appellant’s prior offenses and those for which he was being tried, and because of the inflammatory nature of the evidence and the emotional nature of the crimes. According to the article printed in Ocean City Today, appellant had previously been convicted of an “indecent liberties” charge, a fourth degree sex offense charge, and a perverted practice charge. In addition, the article alleged that he had been charged with, but not convicted of, rape and a sex offense by suffocation. Further, the information was read by all of the jurors.
The evidence against appellant was strong, but not overwhelming. He was the last person seen with Ruggles on the day most likely to have been the day of her death. Her body was found in an area between Ocean City and appellant’s home, in a remote area not likely to be known to someone unfamiliar with the area. In addition, there was evidence that appellant gave Corporal McQueeney a false explanation of what had occurred and that he had made inconsistent statements to Corporal McQueeney and Dolch. The jury was also entitled to believe or disbelieve the testimony of Lewis, that appellant had confessed to killing Ruggles. Absent the confession, the evidence was circumstantial and the jury could have found appellant not guilty.
On the other hand, the trial court inquired of the jurors after they had read the article. Each juror indicated that he or she could decide appellant’s guilt or innocence solely on the basis of the evidence presented at trial. The trial court was able to observe the demeanor of the jurors and believed their assurances. In addition, he instructed the jurors that they were not to discuss the information in the articles during their
In our view, however, the dispositive factor in this case is the similarity of the offenses alleged against appellant in the prior cases to those for which he was on trial. As Williams, supra, Hryciuk, supra, and Keegan, supra, point out, exposure to extrajudicial reports on a juror’s deliberations may be substantial even though it is not perceived by the juror himself or herself. Although the jurors may have honestly thought that they could disregard the information in the articles, in our judgment, any doubts the jurors may have had, reasonable or otherwise, would have been resolved against appellant — even if only subconsciously — as a result of the information contained in the articles.
JUDGMENTS OF THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR WORCESTER COUNTY REVERSED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY WORCESTER COUNTY.
Notes
. Tera Charles, a State’s witness, was unable to attend the trial. Her testimony, as stipulated to by the parties, was read into the record by a secretary in the State’s Attorney’s Office.
. Apparently appellant waited while Ruggles was speaking to Brian, although it is not entirely clear.
