Monday, August 06, 2012

Juror Misconduct, “Manifest Necessity” and Mistrial


As I’ve explained in earlier posts, “juror misconduct” occurs when a trial juror engaged in conduct that is inconsistent with his/her role in a criminal trial.  Technology has made it a more serious problem than it used to be, as jurors go online to research legal or other issues involved in the case they are involved in.  As why that is a problem, check out my prior post on the topic. 

As the caption notes, this post is about a case involving alleged juror misconduct. I’m going to outline the facts in the case this post examines, and then get into the legal issues.  The reason for that will become apparent.

The case is State v. Gunnell, __ N.E.2d __, 2012 WL 2924046 (Ohio Supreme Court 2012), and this is how it arose:

On June 7, 2005, Toneisha Gunnell, Mahogany Patterson, Alicia McAlmont, and Renada Manns drove to the Upper Valley Mall in Springfield, Ohio, to steal clothing. Chris Clarkson, a loss-prevention agent employed by Macy's department store, watched as Gunnell, McAlmont, and Patterson grabbed clothing from the racks and ran from the store to a waiting car driven by Manns. Although Clarkson chased them, Manns accelerated rapidly as they got into the car.

John Deselem, a customer who witnessed the incident, stood in the lane of travel as the car sped toward him, waving his arms in an effort to stop the oncoming vehicle. It struck him without slowing down. The force of the impact sent him into the windshield and threw him over the car and onto the ground. He died at the scene from blunt force injuries to his head. Although the impact had cracked the windshield, Manns drove out of the mall parking lot.

State v. Gunnell, supra.  (Springfield is in Clark County, Ohio.)

The Clark County Sheriff's Department found the car in a ditch a short distance from the mall, recovered the stolen clothing and began searching for the women. State v. Gunnell, supra. The next day, Gunnell, Patterson, McAlmont, and Manns turned themselves in to Columbus, Ohio police. State v. Gunnell, supra.

A Clark County grand jury later indicted them on counts of murder, aggravated robbery, involuntary manslaughter, and theft, and, following a joint trial, a jury found each of them guilty of all charges.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  The Ohio Court of Appeals later reversed their convictions due to a Batson violation.  State v. Gunnell, supra. 

The case was retried and “submitted to the jury on October 1, 2007.”  State v. Gunnell, supra. When the jury was deliberating “later that night,” they asked the trial judge to define “the word `perverse’ as it had been used in the jury instruction relating to the recklessness element of the aggravated-robbery charge.”  State v. Gunnell, supra. The judge did not respond to their request and the jury ended deliberations at 12:22 in the morning of October 2. State v. Gunnell, supra. “Later that morning, when Juror No. 6 returned to court, she brought two pieces of paper, which were intercepted by the bailiff and shared with the court.”  State v. Gunnell, supra. 

The first piece of paper “contained the following handwritten definition of the word perverse: `contrary to the manner or direction of the judge on a point of law .’” State v. Gunnell, supra.  The second was a printout, which read as follows:

Manslaughter: Involuntary

Involuntary manslaughter usually refers to an unintentional killing that results from recklessness or criminal negligence, or from an unlawful act that is a misdemeanor or low-level felony (such as DUI). The usual distinction from voluntary manslaughter is that involuntary manslaughter (sometimes called “criminally negligent homicide”) is a crime in which the victim's death is unintended.

For example, Dan comes home to find his wife in bed with Victor. Distraught, Dan heads to a local bar to drown his sorrows. After having five drinks, Dan jumps into his car and drives down the street at twice the posted speed limit, accidentally hitting and killing a pedestrian.

State v. Gunnell, supra (underlining in the original).

The judge convened a hearing, “which began at 10:41 on . . . October 2, 2007.”  State v. Gunnell, supra.  The prosecution and defense agreed that the judge could not replace Juror No. 6 with an alternate because the jury had already begun its deliberations.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  Juror No. 6 was called to the stand and the following exchange took place between her and the judge:

THE COURT: It's come to our attention that you brought some items in with you this morning. One appears to be a handwritten definition of the term `perverse,’ and another one appears to be something that maybe you printed off of the internet that—

JUROR NO. 6: Yes, I did.

THE COURT: A definition or instruction on `involuntary manslaughter.’ That's -- these are things you brought in with you today?

JUROR NO. 6: That nobody saw them.

THE COURT: You're the only one that saw them?

JUROR NO. 6: I told her that I didn't know we weren't allowed. I'm sorry.

THE COURT: Okay. Did you --

JUROR NO. 6: And I didn't talk about it.

THE COURT: All right. Apparently you were doing some research last night or this morning on the internet or --

JUROR NO. 6: I just wanted to see— everybody kept asking what the word `perverse’ was, and I just wanted to look it up for myself to see exactly what it meant.

THE COURT: Sure. Okay. What about the . . . manslaughter issue? Was there something you were doing on the computer with respect to that?

JUROR NO. 6: No. It was just something I wanted—that was for me. I wasn't going to show them that. I had the other—I had the definition. That was all that I was going to share.

THE COURT: Was there . . . something inadequate or something wrong with the Court's instruction for `involuntary manslaughter’ that you felt like you needed to supplement the instruction or . . . was there something that wasn't clear about the Court's instruction on that?

JUROR NO. 6: No. I was—I was at home. I was on the computer, and I just—I did not get much sleep last night, and I just—that was mainly for myself . I just wanted to have it clear in my own head.

State v. Gunnell, supra (emphasis in the original).

The prosecution and defense agreed that the issue could be addressed by giving Juror No. 6 a “curative instruction” that would require her to agree she would not use either the definition or the example given above.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  The judge, however, said 

. . . We can bring her in, and we can all ask her and try to rehabilitate her; and I'm sure she's going to say all the right things because, again, I think she's a nice person. And she's going to want to try to be accommodating and pleasing, and I know or I'm certain she doesn't want to be responsible for a mistrial.

So she's going to try to appease us and say what she needs to say; but . . . I don't know that I can be convinced that she's going to be able to put this out of her mind.

State v. Gunnell, supra (emphasis in the original).

The judge took a break, and when the hearing resumed, the prosecution “having heard the judge, promptly moved for mistrial”, which the judge granted over the defense’s objection.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  He noted that the juror “had been `irreparably tainted’”, so there was “`no other option’”.  State v. Gunnell, supra. (The hearing “lasted less than one half of an hour.” State v. Gunnell, supra.)  
(After the judge told the jurors he was declaring a mistrial, and why, Juror No. 9 asked why he “`couldn’t . . . have just told us [the definition of involuntary manslaughter brought in by Juror No. 6 was wrong], and we could have gone on?’”  State v. Gunnell, supra. In the dialogue that followed, the judge asked the juror what “that would have done?” and Juror No. 9 said they would have realized “`that that wasn’t right’”, i.e., that it was “`not Ohio law.’”  State v. Gunnell, supra.) 

As Wikipedia explains, if the defense moves for a mistrial, the case can be retried unless the prosecutor goaded the defense into making the motion.  As Wikipedia also notes, if the prosecutor moves for a mistrial, the prohibition on double jeopardy will bar retrial unless the trial judge finds there was “manifest necessity” for granting the mistrial.

After the judge granted the mistrial, Gunnell, Patterson, McAlmont and Manns moved to preclude another trial on the grounds there “had been no manifest necessity” for a mistrial.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  The trial judge denied the motion, the state retried Gunnell, McAlmont and Patterson and a new jury convicted all three.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  The Court of Appeals reversed their convictions on different grounds:  It held that in Patterson’s and Gunnell’s cases, the court should have granted a mistrial because evidence that was not properly submitted went to the jury.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  And in Gunnell’s and McAlmont’s cases, the court held that double jeopardy barred the trial because there was no manifest necessity for granting a mistrial in their second trial.  State v. Gunnell, supra. 

The prosecution appealed the latter issue to the Ohio Supreme Court, which agreed with the Court of Appeals.  State v. Gunnell, supra.  The Supreme Court noted, first, that when a mistrial is based on juror misconduct, the trial judge’s finding of manifest necessity will be upheld unless the appellate court finds that instead of “`exercising sound discretion,” the trial judge “`acted “irrationally or irresponsibly.”’”  State v. Gunnell, supra (quoting Arizona v. Washington, 434 U.S. 497 (1978)).

The court then noted that while “a trial judge's determination of juror bias sufficient to create the need to declare a mistrial is a matter of discretion, the record here reveals nothing of substance from which the judge made his determination.”  State v. Gunnell, supra.  It explained that the judge’s “inquiry of Juror No. 6 was limited and ineffective”, and therefore did not “unearth what bias, if any, the juror absorbed as a result of reading the forbidden material.”  State v. Gunnell, supra. 

The Supreme Court then explained that while it had no way of “appraising Juror No. 6’s credibility”, nothing in the case record established that Juror No. 6 was so

`nice’ she would deny whatever bias she might have incurred to be `accommodating and pleasing,’ thereby violating her oath as a juror. The transcript reveals she was confused about terms for which the trial judge had refused to provide instruction and took it upon herself to educate herself about the terms -- in violation of an unequivocal instruction to not do so. The limited information before us also suggests she understood that it was wrong to do so and had not tainted the jury with the information.

Although all agree that it was error for her to conduct outside research, it was also error for the judge to make no more than a limited inquiry of the juror -- an inquiry that merely established the misconduct, not any prejudice from it. The judge disregarded the constitutional commands that the court, in deciding whether a manifest necessity exists to declare a mistrial, must act `rationally, responsibly, and deliberately.’ We cannot conclude that the trial court acted with deliberateness in this case.

State v. Gunnell, supra. 

The Supreme Court also noted that the “rapidity with which the events unfolded” was not dispositive of the issue, but it did suggest “haste in reaching a conclusion rather than a conclusion made in the `greatest caution.”  State v. Gunnell, supra (quoting U.S. v. Perez, 22 U.S. 579 (1824)).  The court concluded the judge’s declaring the mistrial was “a travesty”, explaining that if the judge had

actually inquired into the salient issue of prejudice with the juror, he may well have acted within his discretion. But we cannot condone the notion that a judge acts rationally, reasonably, or deliberately in declaring a mistrial, on retrial, in a difficult criminal case without any meaningful inquiry into the issue of juror bias. It is neither lawful nor conscionable to predicate a mistrial on speculation alone.

State v. Gunnell, supra. 

The Supreme Court therefore held that the Court of Appeals “was correct in holding that the mistrial was in error and the Constitution demands reversal of these convictions.”  State v. Gunnell, supra.  So, by erroneously granting the mistrial, the trial judge in effect guaranteed that Gunnell, the only defendant at issue in this opinion, cannot be retried for the crimes with which she was indicted.  State v. Gunnell, supra. 

1 comment:

  1. Anonymous6:20 PM

    Two Stupid things: (1) not bothering to explain the meaning of the words the jury had a question about. Number two: Standing in front of a moving car thinking it is going to stop just because you wave you arms at it.

    As far as I am concerned, that dude deserved to get run over. Who the heck does he think he is? Some kind of crime fighter? Who cares if Macy's gets ripped off. Not his clothes. Not his money. NOT his responsibility.

    Hope they put on his headstone, "I died on account of sticking my nose in where it did not belong."

    ReplyDelete