Petitioner was tried and convicted for rape-murder. A crucial
element of the circumstantial evidence against him was a pair of
men's underwear shorts, allegedly petitioner's, bearing stains
identified by prosecution testimony as blood of the victim's blood
type. The judgment of conviction was upheld on appeal. In a
subsequent habeas corpus proceeding, petitioner was first allowed
to have the shorts subjected to chemical analysis, which revealed
that the stains were not blood, but paint. It was further
established that the prosecution knew of the paint stains at the
time of trial. The District Court, for another reason, ordered
petitioner's release or prompt retrial. The Court of Appeals
reversed.
Held: The Fourteenth Amendment cannot tolerate a state
criminal conviction secured by the knowing use of false evidence.
Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U. S. 103,
followed. Pp.
386 U. S. 2-7.
342 F.2d 646, reversed and remanded.
Page 386 U. S. 2
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
On November 26, 1955, in Canton, Illinois, an eight-year-old
girl died as the result of a brutal sexual attack. The petitioner
was charged with her murder.
Prior to his trial in an Illinois court, his counsel filed a
motion for an order permitting a scientific inspection of the
physical evidence the prosecution intended to introduce. [
Footnote 1] The motion was resisted by
the prosecution and denied by the court. The jury trial ended in a
verdict of guilty and a sentence of death. On appeal, the judgment
was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Illinois. [
Footnote 2] On the basis of leads developed at a
subsequent unsuccessful state clemency hearing, the petitioner
applied to a federal district court for a writ of habeas corpus.
[
Footnote 3] After a hearing,
the court granted the writ and ordered the petitioner's release or
prompt retrial. [
Footnote 4]
The Court of Appeals
Page 386 U. S. 3
reversed, [
Footnote 5] and
we granted certiorari to consider whether the trial that led to the
petitioner's conviction was constitutionally valid. [
Footnote 6] We have concluded that it was
not. [
Footnote 7]
There were no eyewitnesses to the brutal crime which the
petitioner was charged with perpetrating. A vital component of the
case against him was a pair of men's underwear shorts covered with
large, dark, reddish-brown stains -- People's Exhibit 3 in the
trial record. These shorts had been found by a Canton policeman in
a place known as the Van Buren Flats three days after the murder.
The Van Buren Flats were about a mile from the scene of the crime.
It was the prosecution's theory that the petitioner had been
wearing these shorts when he committed the murder, and that he had
afterwards removed and discarded them at the Van Buren Flats.
During the presentation of the prosecution's case, People's
Exhibit 3 was variously described by witnesses in such terms as the
"bloody shorts" and "a pair of jockey shorts stained with blood."
Early in the trial, the victim's mother testified that her daughter
"had type
A' positive blood." Evidence was later introduced to
show that the petitioner's blood "was of group `O.'"
Against this background, the jury heard the testimony of a
chemist for the State Bureau of Crime Identification. The
prosecution established his qualifications as an expert, whose
"duties include blood identification, grouping and typing both dry
and fresh stains," and who had "made approximately one thousand
blood typing analyses
Page 386 U. S. 4
while at the State Bureau." His crucial testimony was as
follows:
"I examined and tested 'People's Exhibit 3' to determine the
nature of the staining material upon it. The result of the first
test was that this material upon the shorts is blood. I made a
second examination which disclosed that the blood is of human
origin. I made a further examination which disclosed that the blood
is of group 'A.'"
The petitioner, testifying in his own behalf, denied that he had
ever owned or worn the shorts in evidence as People's Exhibit 3. He
himself referred to the shorts as having "dried blood on them."
In argument to the jury, the prosecutor made the most of
People's Exhibit 3:
"Those shorts were found in the Van Buren Flats, with blood.
What type blood? Not 'O' blood as the defendant has, but 'A' --
type 'A.'"
And later in his argument, he said to the jury:
"And, if you will recall, it has never been contradicted the
blood type of Janice May was blood type 'A' positive. Blood type
'A.' Blood type 'A' on these shorts. I t wasn't 'O' type, as the
defendant has. It is 'A' type, what the little girl had."
Such was the state of the evidence with respect to People's
Exhibit 3 as the case went to the jury. And such was the state of
the record as the judgment of conviction was reviewed by the
Supreme Court of Illinois. The "blood stained shorts" clearly
played a vital part in the case for the prosecution. They were an
important link in the chain of circumstantial evidence against the
petitioner, [
Footnote 8] and,
in the context of the revolting crime with
Page 386 U. S. 5
which he was charged, their gruesomely emotional impact upon the
jury was incalculable. [
Footnote
9]
So matters stood with respect to People's Exhibit 3 until the
present habeas corpus proceeding in the Federal District Court.
[
Footnote 10] In this
proceeding, the State was ordered to produce the stained shorts,
and they were admitted in evidence. It was established that their
appearance was the same as when they had been introduced at the
trial as People's Exhibit 3. The petitioner was permitted to have
the shorts examined by a chemical microanalyst. What the
microanalyst found cast an extraordinary new light on People's
Exhibit 3. The reddish-brown stains on the shorts were not blood,
but paint.
The witness said that he had tested threads from each of the 10
reddish-brown stained areas on the shorts, and that he had found
that all of them were encrusted with mineral pigments ". . . which
one commonly uses in the preparation of paints." He found "no
traces of human blood." [
Footnote 11] The State did not dispute this testimony,
its counsel contenting himself with prevailing upon the witness to
concede on cross-examination that he could not swear that there had
never been any blood on the shorts. [
Footnote 12]
Page 386 U. S. 6
It was further established that counsel for the prosecution had
known at the time of the trial that the shorts were stained with
paint. The prosecutor even admitted that the Canton police had
prepared a memorandum attempting to explain "how this exhibit
contains all the paint on it."
In argument at the close of the habeas corpus hearing, counsel
for the State contended that "[e]verybody" at the trial had known
that the shorts were stained with paint. [
Footnote 13] That contention is totally belied by the
record. The microanalyst correctly described the appearance of the
shorts when he said,
"I assumed I was dealing . . . with a pair of shorts which was
heavily stained with blood. . . . [I]t would appear to a layman . .
. that what I see before me is a garment heavily stained with
blood. [
Footnote 14]"
The record of the petitioner's trial reflects the prosecution's
consistent and repeated misrepresentation that People's Exhibit 3
was, indeed, "a garment heavily stained with blood." The
prosecution's whole theory with respect to the exhibit depended
upon that misrepresentation. For the theory was that the victim's
assailant had discarded the shorts because they were stained with
blood. A pair of paint-stained shorts, found in an abandoned
building a mile away from the scene of the crime, was virtually
valueless as evidence against the petitioner. [
Footnote 15] The prosecution deliberately
misrepresented the truth.
Page 386 U. S. 7
More than 30 years ago, this Court held that the Fourteenth
Amendment cannot tolerate a state criminal conviction obtained by
the knowing use of false evidence.
Mooney v. Holohan,
294 U. S. 103.
There has been no deviation from that established principle.
Napue v. Illinois, 360 U. S. 264;
Pyle v. Kansas, 317 U. S. 213;
cf. Alcorta v. Texas, 355 U. S. 28. There
can be no retreat from that principle here.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case
is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
"Comes now the defendant, Lloyd Eldon Miller Junior, by William
H. Malmgren, his attorney, and hereby moves the Court to enter an
order permitting defendant to make, or cause to be made, upon such
terms and conditions as to the court seems necessary to adequately
insure the interests of the parties, a scientifice [
sic]
examination of the physical evidence to be introduced by the People
in this cause and, to that end, enter an order requiring the
People, by their attorney, to produce and make available all of
said evidence for such an examination."
"For cause, movant says that such an examination is necessary to
adequately prepare the defense herein."
[
Footnote 2]
13 Ill. 2d
84,
148 N.E.2d
455.
[
Footnote 3]
An earlier federal habeas corpus application had been
unsuccessful.
Miller v. Pate, 300 F.2d 414.
[
Footnote 4]
226 F. Supp. 541.
[
Footnote 5]
342 F.2d 646.
[
Footnote 6]
384 U.S. 998.
[
Footnote 7]
The petitioner has relied upon several different grounds for
reversal of the judgment of the Court of Appeals. In deciding the
case upon only one of those grounds, we intimate no view as to the
merits of the others.
[
Footnote 8]
In affirming the petitioner's conviction, the Supreme Court of
Illinois stated that "it was determined" that the shorts "were
stained with human blood from group A," and referred to the
petitioner's "bloody shorts." 13 Ill. 2d at 89 and 106, 148 N.E.2d
at 458 and 467.
[
Footnote 9]
People's Exhibit 3 was forwarded here as part of the record, and
we have accordingly had an opportunity to see it with our own
eyes.
[
Footnote 10]
At the state clemency hearing, some additional evidence was
adduced to show that the shorts had not belonged to the
petitioner.
[
Footnote 11]
There were two other discolored areas on the shorts, one black
and the other "a kind of yellowish color." A thread from the first
of these areas contained material "similar to a particle of
carbon." "[N]o particulates showed up" on the thread taken from the
other.
[
Footnote 12]
The witness pointed out, however, that
"blood substances are detectable over prolonged periods. That
is, there are records of researches in which substances extracted
from Egyptian mummies have been identified as blood."
[
Footnote 13]
"Now, then, concerning the paint on the shorts, the petitioner
yesterday introduced scientific evidence to prove that there was
paint on the shorts, a fact that they knew without scientific
evidence. Everybody knew, in connection with the case, whoever
looked at the shorts, and I think that the Court can look at them
now and know there is paint on them. This is not anything that was
not disclosed to anybody. It is very obvious by merely looking at
them. . . ."
[
Footnote 14]
See n 9,
supra.
[
Footnote 15]
The petitioner was not a painter, but a taxi driver.