At respondent's Arkansas state court trial for capital felony
murder, the judge at
voir dire removed for cause, over
respondent's objections, those prospective jurors who stated that
they could not under any circumstances vote for the imposition of
the death penalty -- that is, so-called
"
Witherspoon-excludables" under the principles of
Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U. S. 510. The
jury convicted respondent, but, at the sentencing phase of the
trial, it rejected the State's request for the death penalty and
set punishment at life imprisonment without parole. The conviction
was affirmed on appeal, and respondent's petition for state
postconviction relief was denied. He then sought federal habeas
corpus relief, contending that the "death qualification" of the
jury by the removal for cause of the
"
Witherspoon-excludables" violated his rights under the
Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to have his guilt or innocence
determined by an impartial jury selected from a representative
cross-section of the community. The District Court ruled that
"death qualification" of the jury prior to the guilt phase of the
bifurcated trial violated both the fair cross section and the
impartiality requirements of the Constitution. The Court of Appeals
affirmed on the ground that removal for cause of
"
Witherspoon-excludables" violated respondent's Sixth
Amendment right to a jury selected from a fair cross-section of the
community.
Held: The Constitution does not prohibit the removal
for cause, prior to the guilt phase of a bifurcated capital trial,
of prospective jurors whose opposition to the death penalty is so
strong that it would prevent or substantially impair the
performance of their duties as jurors at the sentencing phase of
the trial. This is so even assuming,
arguendo, that the
social science studies introduced in the courts below were adequate
to establish that "death qualification" in fact produces juries
somewhat more "conviction-prone" than "non-death-qualified" juries.
Pp.
476 U. S.
173-183.
(a) "Death qualification" of a jury does not violate the fair
cross section requirement of the Sixth Amendment, which applies to
jury panels or venires but does not require that petit juries
actually chosen reflect the composition of the community at large.
Even if the requirement were extended to petit juries, the essence
of a fair cross section claim is the systematic exclusion of a
"distinctive group" in the community
Page 476 U. S. 163
-- such as blacks, women, and Mexican-Americans -- for reasons
completely unrelated to the ability of members of the group to
serve as jurors in a particular case. Groups defined solely in
terms of shared attitudes that would prevent or substantially
impair members of the group from performing one of their duties as
jurors, such as the "
Witherspoon-excludables" at issue
here, are not "distinctive groups" for fair cross section purposes.
"Death qualification" is carefully designed to serve the State's
legitimate interest in obtaining a single jury that can properly
and impartially apply the law to the facts of the case at both the
guilt and sentencing phases of a capital trial. Pp.
476 U. S.
173-177.
(b) Nor does "death qualification" of a jury violate the
constitutional right to an impartial jury on the theory asserted by
respondent that, because all individual jurors are to some extent
predisposed towards one result or another, a constitutionally
impartial jury can be constructed only by "balancing" the various
predispositions of the individual jurors, and when the State "tips
the scales" by excluding prospective jurors with a particular
viewpoint, an impermissibly partial jury results. An impartial jury
consists of nothing more than jurors who will conscientiously apply
the law and find the facts. Respondent's view of jury impartiality
is both illogical and impractical. Neither
Witherspoon,
supra, nor
Adams v. Texas, 448 U. S.
38, supports respondent's contention that a State
violates the Constitution whenever it "slants" the jury by
excluding a group of individuals more likely than the population at
large to favor the defendant. Here, the removal for cause of
"
Witherspoon-excludables" serves the State's entirely
proper interest in obtaining a single jury (as required by Arkansas
law) that could impartially decide all of the issues at both the
guilt and the penalty phases of respondent's trial. Moreover, both
Witherspoon and
Adams dealt With the special
context of capital sentencing, where the range of jury discretion
necessarily gave rise to far greater concern over the effects of an
"imbalanced" jury. The case at bar, by contrast, deals not with
capital sentencing, but with the jury's more traditional role of
finding the facts and determining the guilt or innocence of a
criminal defendant, where jury discretion is more channeled. Pp.
476 U. S.
177-183.
758 F.2d 226, reversed.
REHNQUIST, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, POWELL, and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined.
BLACKMUN, J., concurred in the result. MARSHALL, J., filed a
dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and STEVENS, JJ., joined,
post, p.
476 U. S.
184.
Page 476 U. S. 165
JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we address the question left open by our decision
nearly 18 years ago in
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
391 U. S. 510
(1968): does the Constitution prohibit the removal for cause, prior
to the guilt phase of a bifurcated capital trial, of prospective
jurors whose opposition to the death penalty is so strong that it
would prevent or substantially impair the performance of their
duties as jurors at the sentencing phase of the trial?
See
id. at
391 U. S. 520,
n. 18;
Bumper v. North Carolina, 391 U.
S. 543,
391 U. S. 545
(1968). We hold that it does not.
Respondent Ardia McCree filed a habeas corpus petition in the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas
claiming that such removal for cause violated the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments and, after McCree's case was consolidated
with another habeas case involving the same claim on remand from
the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, the District Court
ruled in McCree's favor and granted habeas relief
Grigsby v.
Mabry, 569 F.
Supp. 1273 (1983). A sharply divided Eighth Circuit affirmed,
Grigsby v. Mabry, 758 F.2d 226 (1985) (en banc), creating
a conflict with recent decisions of the Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, and
Eleventh Circuits.
See Keeten v. Garrison, 742 F.2d 129,
133-135 (CA4 1984),
cert. pending, No. 84-6187;
Smith
v. Balkcom, 660 F.2d 573, 576-578 (CA5 1981),
modified on
other grounds, 671 F.2d 858,
cert. denied sub nom. Tison
v. Arizona, 459 U.S. 882 (1982);
Spinkellink v.
Wainwright, 578 F.2d 582, 594 (CA5 1978),
cert.
denied, 440 U.S. 976 (1979);
United States ex rel. Clark
v. Fike, 538 F.2d 750, 761-762 (CA7 1976),
cert.
denied, 429 U.S. 1064 (1977); and
Corn v. Zant, 708
F.2d 549, 564 (CA11 1983),
cert. denied, 467 U.
S. 1220 (1984). We granted certiorari to resolve the
conflict, 474 U.S. 816 (1985), and now reverse the judgment of the
Eighth Circuit.
On the morning of February 14, 1978, a combination gift shop and
service station in Camden, Arkansas, was robbed,
Page 476 U. S. 166
and Evelyn Boughton, the owner, was shot and killed. That
afternoon, Ardia McCree was arrested in Hot Springs, Arkansas,
after a police officer saw him driving a maroon and white Lincoln
Continental matching an eyewitness' description of the getaway car
used by Boughton's killer. The next evening, McCree admitted to
police that he had been at Boughton's shop at the time of the
murder. He claimed, however, that a tall black stranger wearing an
overcoat first asked him for a ride, then took McCree's rifle out
of the back of the car and used it to kill Boughton. McCree also
claimed that, after the murder, the stranger rode with McCree to a
nearby dirt road, got out of the car, and walked away with the
rifle. McCree's story was contradicted by two eyewitnesses who saw
McCree's car between the time of the murder and the time when
McCree said the stranger got out and walked away, and who stated
that they saw only one person in the car. The police found McCree's
rifle and a bank bag from Boughton's shop alongside the dirt road.
Based on ballistics tests, a Federal Bureau of Investigation
officer testified that the bullet that killed Boughton had been
fired from McCree's rifle.
McCree was charged with capital felony murder in violation of
Ark.Stat.Ann. § 41-1501(1)(a) (1977). In accordance with
Arkansas law,
see Neal v. State, 259 Ark. 27, 31,
531 S.W.2d
17, 21 (1975), the trial judge at
voir dire removed
for cause, over McCree's objections, those prospective jurors who
stated that they could not under any circumstances vote for the
imposition of the death penalty. Eight prospective jurors were
excluded for this reason. The jury convicted McCree of capital
felony murder, but rejected the State's request for the death
penalty, instead setting McCree's punishment at life imprisonment
without parole. McCree's conviction was affirmed on direct appeal,
McCree v. State, 266 Ark. 465,
585
S.W.2d 938 (1979), and his petition for state postconviction
relief was denied.
Page 476 U. S. 167
McCree then filed a federal habeas corpus petition raising,
inter alia, the claim that "death qualification," or the
removal for cause of the so-called
"
Witherspoon-excludable" prospective jurors, [
Footnote 1] violated his right under
the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments to have his guilt or innocence
determined by an impartial jury selected from a representative
cross-section of the community. By stipulation of the parties, this
claim was consolidated with another pending habeas case involving
the same claim, which had been remanded by the Eighth Circuit for
an evidentiary hearing in the District Court. App. 9-11;
Grigsby v. Mabry, 637 F.2d 525 (1980). The District Court
denied the remainder of McCree's petition, and the Eighth Circuit
affirmed.
McCree v. Housewright, 689 F.2d 797 (1982),
cert. denied, 460 U.S. 1088 (1983).
The District Court held a hearing on the "death qualification"
issue in July, 1981, receiving in evidence numerous social science
studies concerning the attitudes and beliefs of
"
Witherspoon-excludables," along with the potential
effects of excluding them from the jury prior to the guilt phase of
a bifurcated capital trial. In August, 1983, the court concluded,
based on the social science evidence, that "death qualification"
produced juries that "were more prone to convict" capital
defendants than "non-death-qualified" juries.
Grigsby v.
Mabry, 569 F. Supp. at 1323. The court ruled
Page 476 U. S. 168
that "death qualification" thus violated both the fair
cross-section and impartiality requirements of the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments, and granted McCree habeas relief.
Id. at 1324. [
Footnote
2]
The Eighth Circuit found "substantial evidentiary support" for
the District Court's conclusion that the removal for cause of
"
Witherspoon-excludables" resulted in "conviction-prone"
juries, and affirmed the grant of habeas relief on the ground that
such removal for cause violated McCree's constitutional right to a
jury selected from a fair cross-section of the community.
Grigsby v. Mabry, 758 F.2d at 229. The Eighth Circuit did
not address McCree's impartiality claim.
Ibid. The Eighth
Circuit left it up to the discretion of the State "to construct a
fair process" for future capital trials that would comply with the
Sixth Amendment.
Id. at 242-243. Four judges dissented.
Id. at 243-251.
Before turning to the legal issues in the case, we are
constrained to point out what we believe to be several serious
flaws in the evidence upon which the courts below reached the
conclusion that "death qualification" produces "conviction-prone"
juries. [
Footnote 3] McCree
introduced into evidence
Page 476 U. S. 169
some 15 social science studies in support of his constitutional
claims, but only 6 of the studies even purported to measure the
potential effects on the guilt-innocence determination of the
removal from the jury of "
Witherspoon-excludables."
[
Footnote 4] Eight of the
remaining nine studies dealt solely with generalized attitudes and
beliefs about the death penalty and other aspects of the criminal
justice system, and were thus, at best, only marginally relevant to
the constitutionality of McCree's conviction. [
Footnote 5] The 15th and final study
Page 476 U. S. 170
dealt with the effects on prospective jurors of
voir
dire questioning about their attitudes toward the death
penalty, [
Footnote 6] an issue
McCree raised in his brief to this Court, but that counsel for
McCree admitted at oral argument would not, standing alone, give
rise to a constitutional violation. [
Footnote 7]
Of the six studies introduced by McCree that at least purported
to deal with the central issue in this case, namely, the potential
effects on the determination of guilt or innocence of excluding
"
Witherspoon-excludables" from the jury, three were also
before this Court when it decided
Witherspoon. [
Footnote 8] There, this Court reviewed
the studies and concluded:
"The data adduced by the petitioner . . . are too tentative and
fragmentary to establish that jurors not opposed to the death
penalty tend to favor the prosecution in the determination of
guilt. We simply cannot conclude, either on the basis of the record
now before us or as a matter of judicial notice, that the exclusion
of jurors
Page 476 U. S. 171
opposed to capital punishment results in an unrepresentative
jury on the issue of guilt or substantially increases the risk of
conviction. In light of the presently available information, we are
not prepared to announce a
per se constitutional rule
requiring the reversal of every conviction returned by a jury
selected as this one was."
391 U.S. at
391 U. S.
517-518 (footnote omitted). It goes almost without
saying that, if these studies were "too tentative and fragmentary"
to make out a claim of constitutional error in 1968, the same
studies, unchanged but for having aged some 18 years, are still
insufficient to make out such a claim in this case.
Nor do the three post-
Witherspoon studies introduced by
McCree on the "death qualification" issue provide substantial
support for the "
per se constitutional rule" McCree asks
this Court to adopt. All three of the "new" studies were based on
the responses of individuals randomly selected from some segment of
the population, but who were not actual jurors sworn under oath to
apply the law to the facts of an actual case involving the fate of
an actual capital defendant. [
Footnote 9] We have serious doubts about the value of
these studies in predicting the behavior of actual jurors.
See
Grigsby v. Mabry, 758 F.2d at 248, n. 7 (J. Gibson, J.,
dissenting). In addition, two of the three "new" studies did not
even attempt to simulate the process of jury deliberation,
[
Footnote 10] and none of
the "new" studies was able to predict to what extent, if any, the
presence of one or more "
Witherspoon-excludables" on a
Page 476 U. S. 172
guilt-phase jury would have altered the outcome of the guilt
determination. [
Footnote
11]
Finally, and most importantly, only one of the six "death
qualification" studies introduced by McCree even attempted to
identify and account for the presence of so-called "nullifiers," or
individuals who, because of their deep-seated opposition to the
death penalty, would be unable to decide a capital defendant's
guilt or innocence fairly and impartially. [
Footnote 12] McCree concedes, as he must, that
"nullifiers" may properly be excluded from the guilt-phase jury,
and studies that fail to take into account the presence of such
"nullifiers" thus are fatally flawed. [
Footnote 13] Surely a "
per se constitutional
rule" as far-reaching
Page 476 U. S. 173
as the one McCree proposes should not be based on the results of
the lone study that avoids this fundamental flaw.
Having identified some of the more serious problems with
McCree's studies, however, we will assume for purposes of this
opinion that the studies are both methodologically valid and
adequate to establish that "death qualification" in fact produces
juries somewhat more "conviction-prone" than "non-death-qualified"
juries. We hold, nonetheless, that the Constitution does not
prohibit the States from "death qualifying" juries in capital
cases.
The Eighth Circuit ruled that "death qualification" violated
McCree's right under the Sixth Amendment, as applied to the States
via incorporation through the Fourteenth Amendment,
see Duncan
v. Louisiana, 391 U. S. 145,
391 U. S.
148-158 (1968), to a jury selected from a representative
cross-section of the community. But we do not believe that the fair
cross-section requirement can, or should, be applied as broadly as
that court attempted to apply it. We have never invoked the fair
cross-section principle to invalidate the use of either for-cause
or peremptory challenges to prospective jurors, or to require petit
juries, as opposed to jury panels or venires, to reflect the
composition of the community at large.
See Duren v.
Missouri, 439 U. S. 357,
439 U. S.
363-364 (1979);
Taylor v. Louisiana,
419 U. S. 522,
419 U. S. 538
(1975) ("[W]e impose no requirement that petit juries actually
chosen must mirror the community and reflect the various
distinctive groups in the population");
cf. Batson v. Kentucky,
ante at
476 U. S. 84-85,
n. 4 (expressly declining to address "fair cross-section" challenge
to discriminatory use of peremptory challenges). [
Footnote 14] The limited
Page 476 U. S. 174
scope of the fair cross-section requirement is a direct and
inevitable consequence of the practical impossibility of providing
each criminal defendant with a truly "representative" petit jury,
see ante at
476 U. S. 85-86,
n. 6, a basic truth that the Court of Appeals itself acknowledged
for many years prior to its decision in the instant case.
See
United States v. Childress, 715 F.2d 1313 (CA8 1983) (en
banc),
cert. denied, 464 U.S. 1063 (1984);
Pope v.
United States, 372 F.2d 710, 725 (CA8 1967) (Blackmun, J.)
("The point at which an accused is entitled to a fair cross-section
of the community is when the names are put in the box from which
the panels are drawn"),
vacated on other grounds,
392 U. S. 651
(1968). We remain convinced that an extension of the fair
cross-section requirement to petit juries would be unworkable and
unsound, and we decline McCree's invitation to adopt such an
extension.
But even if we were willing to extend the fair cross-section
requirement to petit juries, we would still reject the Eighth
Circuit's conclusion that "death qualification" violates that
requirement. The essence of a "fair cross-section" claim is the
systematic exclusion of "a
distinctive' group in the
community." Duren, supra, at 439 U. S. 364.
In our view, groups defined solely in terms of shared attitudes
that would prevent or substantially impair members of the group
from performing one of their duties as jurors, such as the
"Witherspoon-excludables" at issue here, are not
"distinctive groups" for fair cross-section purposes.
We have never attempted to precisely define the term
"distinctive group," and we do not undertake to do so today. But we
think it obvious that the concept of "distinctiveness" must be
linked to the purposes of the fair cross-section requirement. In
Taylor, supra, we identified those purposes as (1)
"guard[ing] against the exercise of arbitrary power" and ensuring
that the "common sense judgment of the community" will act as "a
hedge against the overzealous or mistaken prosecutor," (2)
preserving "public confidence in the
Page 476 U. S. 175
fairness of the criminal justice system," and (3) implementing
our belief that "sharing in the administration of justice is a
phase of civic responsibility."
Id. at
419 U. S.
530-531.
Our prior jury representativeness cases, whether based on the
fair cross-section component of the Sixth Amendment or the Equal
Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, have involved such
groups as blacks,
see Peters v. Kiff, 407 U.
S. 493 (1972) (opinion of MARSHALL, J.) (equal
protection); women,
see Duren, supra, (fair
cross-section);
Taylor, supra, (same); and
Mexican-Americans,
see Castaneda v. Partida, 430 U.
S. 482 (1977) (equal protection). The wholesale
exclusion of these large groups from jury service clearly
contravened all three of the aforementioned purposes of the fair
cross-section requirement. Because these groups were excluded for
reasons completely unrelated to the ability of members of the group
to serve as jurors in a particular case, the exclusion raised at
least the possibility that the composition of juries would be
arbitrarily skewed in such a way as to deny criminal defendants the
benefit of the common-sense judgment of the community. In addition,
the exclusion from jury service of large groups of individuals not
on the basis of their inability to serve as jurors, but on the
basis of some immutable characteristic such as race, gender, or
ethnic background, undeniably gave rise to an "appearance of
unfairness." Finally, such exclusion improperly deprived members of
these often historically disadvantaged groups of their right as
citizens to serve on juries in criminal cases.
The group of "
Witherspoon-excludables" involved in the
case at bar differs significantly from the groups we have
previously recognized as "distinctive." "Death qualification,"
unlike the wholesale exclusion of blacks, women, or
Mexican-Americans from jury service, is carefully designed to serve
the State's concededly legitimate interest in obtaining a single
jury that can properly and impartially apply the law to the facts
of the case at both the guilt and sentencing phases of
Page 476 U. S. 176
a capital trial. [
Footnote
15] There is very little danger, therefore, and McCree does not
even argue, that "death qualification" was instituted as a means
for the State to arbitrarily skew the composition of capital-case
juries. [
Footnote 16]
Furthermore, unlike blacks, women, and Mexican-Americans,
"
Witherspoon-excludables" are singled out for exclusion in
capital cases on the basis of an attribute that is within the
individual's control. It is important to remember that not all who
oppose the death penalty are subject to removal for cause in
capital cases; those who firmly believe that the death penalty is
unjust may nevertheless serve as jurors in capital cases so long as
they state clearly that they are willing to temporarily set aside
their own beliefs in deference to the rule of law. Because the
group of "
Witherspoon-excludables" includes only those who
cannot and will not conscientiously obey the law with respect to
one of the issues in a capital case, "death qualification" hardly
can be said to create an "appearance of unfairness."
Finally, the removal for cause of
"
Witherspoon-excludables" in capital cases does not
prevent them from serving as jurors in other criminal cases, and
thus leads to no substantial deprivation of their basic rights of
citizenship. They are treated no differently than any juror who
expresses the view that he would be unable to follow the law in a
particular case.
In sum, "
Witherspoon-excludables," or, for that matter,
any other group defined solely in terms of shared attitudes that
render members of the group unable to serve as jurors in a
Page 476 U. S. 177
particular case, may be excluded from jury service without
contravening any of the basic objectives of the fair cross-section
requirement.
See Lockett v. Ohio, 438 U.
S. 586,
438 U. S. 597
(1978) ("Nothing in
Taylor, however, suggests that the
right to a representative jury includes the right to be tried by
jurors who have explicitly indicated an inability to follow the law
and instructions of the trial judge"). It is for this reason that
we conclude that "
Witherspoon-excludables" do not
constitute a "distinctive group" for fair cross-section purposes,
and hold that "death qualification" does not violate the fair
cross-section requirement.
McCree argues that, even if we reject the Eighth Circuit's fair
cross-section holding, we should affirm the judgment below on the
alternative ground, adopted by the District Court, that "death
qualification" violated his constitutional right to an impartial
jury. McCree concedes that the individual jurors who served at his
trial were impartial, as that term was defined by this Court in
cases such as
Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.
S. 717,
366 U. S. 723
(1961) ("It is sufficient if the juror can lay aside his impression
or opinion and render a verdict based on the evidence presented in
court"), and
Reynolds v. United States, 98 U. S.
145 (1879). He does not claim that pretrial publicity,
see Rideau v. Louisiana, 373 U. S. 723
(1963),
ex parte communications,
see Remmer v. United
States, 347 U. S. 227
(1954), or other undue influence,
see Estes v. Texas,
381 U. S. 532
(1965), affected the jury's deliberations. In short, McCree does
not claim that his conviction was tainted by any of the kinds of
jury bias or partiality that we have previously recognized as
violative of the Constitution. Instead, McCree argues that his jury
lacked impartiality because the absence of
"
Witherspoon-excludables" "slanted" the jury in favor of
conviction.
We do not agree. McCree's "impartiality" argument apparently is
based on the theory that, because all individual jurors are to some
extent predisposed towards one result or another, a
constitutionally impartial jury can be constructed
Page 476 U. S. 178
only by "balancing" the various predispositions of the
individual
jurors. Thus, according to McCree, when the
State "tips the scales" by excluding prospective jurors with a
particular viewpoint, an impermissibly partial jury results. We
have consistently rejected this view of jury impartiality,
including as recently as last Term, when we squarely held that an
impartial
jury consists of nothing more than
"
jurors who will conscientiously apply the law and find
the facts."
Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.
S. 412,
469 U. S. 423
(1985) (emphasis added);
see also Smith v. Phillips,
455 U. S. 209,
455 U. S. 217
(1982) ("Due process means a jury capable and willing to decide the
case solely on the evidence before it");
Irvin v. Dowd,
supra, at
366 U. S. 722
("In essence, the right to jury trial guarantees to the criminally
accused a fair trial by a panel of impartial,
indifferent'
jurors").
The view of jury impartiality urged upon us by McCree is both
illogical and hopelessly impractical. McCree characterizes the jury
that convicted him as "slanted" by the process of "death
qualification." But McCree admits that exactly the same 12
individuals could have ended up on his jury through the "luck of
the draw," without in any way violating the constitutional
guarantee of impartiality. Even accepting McCree's position that we
should focus on the
jury, rather than the individual
jurors, it is hard for us to understand the logic of the
argument that a given jury is unconstitutionally partial when it
results from a state-ordained process, yet impartial when exactly
the same jury results from mere chance. On a more practical level,
if it were true that the Constitution required a certain mix of
individual viewpoints on the jury, then trial judges would be
required to undertake the Sisyphean task of "balancing" juries,
making sure that each contains the proper number of Democrats and
Republicans, young persons and old persons, white-collar executives
and blue-collar laborers, and so on. Adopting McCree's concept of
jury impartiality would also likely require the elimination of
peremptory challenges, which are commonly used by both
Page 476 U. S. 179
the State and the defendant to attempt to produce a jury
favorable to the challenger.
McCree argues, however, that this Court's decisions in
Witherspoon and
Adams v. Texas, 448 U. S.
38 (1980), stand for the proposition that a State
violates the Constitution whenever it "slants" the jury by
excluding a group of individuals more likely than the population at
large to favor the criminal defendant. We think McCree overlooks
two fundamental differences between
Witherspoon and
Adams and the instant case, and therefore misconceives the
import and scope of those two decisions.
First, the Court in
Witherspoon viewed the Illinois
system as having been deliberately slanted for the purpose of
making the imposition of the death penalty more likely. The Court
said:
"But when it swept from the jury all who expressed conscientious
or religious scruples against capital punishment and all who
opposed it in principle, the State crossed the line of neutrality.
In its quest for a jury capable of imposing the death penalty, the
State produced a jury uncommonly willing to condemn a man to
die."
"It is, of course, settled that a State may not entrust the
determination of whether a man is innocent or guilty to a tribunal
'organized to convict.'
Fay v. New York, 332 U. S.
261,
332 U. S. 294 [1947].
See Tumey v. Ohio, 273 U. S. 510 [1927]. It
requires but a short step from that principle to hold, as we do
today, that a State may not entrust the determination of whether a
man should live or die to a tribunal organized to return a verdict
of death."
391 U.S. at
391 U. S.
520-521 (footnotes omitted). In
Adams v. Texas,
supra, the Court explained the rationale for
Witherspoon as follows:
"In this context, the Court held that a State may not
constitutionally execute a death sentence imposed by a jury culled
of all those who revealed during
voir dire examination
Page 476 U. S. 180
that they had conscientious scruples against or were otherwise
opposed to capital punishment. The State was held to have no valid
interest in such a broad-based rule of exclusion, since"
"[a] man who opposes the death penalty, no less than one who
favors it, can make the discretionary judgment entrusted to him . .
. , and can thus obey the oath he takes as a juror."
"
Witherspoon v. Illinois, 391 U.S. at
391 U. S.
519."
448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 43.
Adams, in turn, involved a fairly straightforward
application of the
Witherspoon rule to the Texas capital
punishment scheme.
See Adams, supra, at
448 U. S. 48
(Texas exclusion statute "focuses the inquiry directly on the
prospective juror's beliefs about the death penalty, and hence
clearly falls within the scope of the
Witherspoon
doctrine").
Here, on the other hand, the removal for cause of
"
Witherspoon-excludables" serves the State's entirely
proper interest in obtaining a single jury that could impartially
decide all of the issues in McCree's case. Arkansas, by legislative
enactment and judicial decision, provides for the use of a unitary
jury in capital cases.
See Ark.Stat.Ann. § 41-1301(3)
(1977);
Rector v. State, 280 Ark. 385, 395,
659 S.W.2d
168, 173 (1983),
cert. denied, 466 U.
S. 988 (1984). We have upheld against constitutional
attack the Georgia capital sentencing plan which provided that the
same jury must sit in both phases of a bifurcated capital murder
trial,
Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U. S. 153,
428 U. S. 158,
428 U. S. 160,
428 U. S. 163
(1976) (opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.), and since
then have observed that we are "unwilling to say that there is any
one right way for a State to set up its capital sentencing scheme."
Spaziano v. Florida, 468 U. S. 447,
468 U. S. 464
(1984).
The Arkansas Supreme Court recently explained the State's
legislative choice to require unitary juries in capital cases:
"It has always been the law in Arkansas, except when the
punishment is mandatory, that the same jurors who have the
responsibility for determining guilt or innocence
Page 476 U. S. 181
must also shoulder the burden of fixing the punishment. That is
as it should be, for the two questions are necessarily
interwoven."
Rector, supra, at 395, 659 S.W.2d at 173. Another
interest identified by the State in support of its system of
unitary juries is the possibility that, in at least some capital
cases, the defendant might benefit at the sentencing phase of the
trial from the jury's "residual doubts" about the evidence
presented at the guilt phase. The dissenting opinion in the Court
of Appeals also adverted to this interest:
"[A]s several courts have observed, jurors who decide both guilt
and penalty are likely to form residual doubts or 'whimsical'
doubts . . . about the evidence, so as to bend them to decide
against the death penalty. Such residual doubt has been recognized
as an extremely effective argument for defendants in capital cases.
To divide the responsibility . . . to some degree would eliminate
the influence of such doubts."
758 F.2d at 247-248 (J. Gibson, J., dissenting) (citations
omitted). JUSTICE MARSHALL's dissent points out that some States
which adhere to the unitary jury system do not allow the defendant
to argue "residual doubts" to the jury at sentencing. But while
this may justify skepticism as to the extent to which such States
are willing to go to allow defendants to capitalize on "residual
doubts," it does not wholly vitiate the claimed interest. Finally,
it seems obvious to us that in most, if not all, capital cases,
much of the evidence adduced at the guilt phase of the trial will
also have a bearing on the penalty phase; if two different juries
were to be required, such testimony would have to be presented
twice, once to each jury. As the Arkansas Supreme Court has noted,
"[s]uch repetitive trials could not be consistently fair to the
State, and perhaps not even to the accused."
Rector,
supra, at 396, 659 S.W.2d at 173.
Page 476 U. S. 182
Unlike the Illinois system criticized by the Court in
Witherspoon, and the Texas system at issue in
Adams, the Arkansas system excludes from the jury only
those who may properly be excluded from the penalty phase of the
deliberations under
Witherspoon, Adams, and
Wainwright
v. Witt, 469 U. S. 412
(1985). [
Footnote 17] That
State's reasons for adhering to its preference for a single jury to
decide both the guilt and penalty phases of a capital trial are
sufficient to negate the inference which the Court drew in
Witherspoon concerning the lack of any neutral
justification for the Illinois rule on jury challenges.
Second, and more importantly, both
Witherspoon and
Adams dealt with the special context of capital
sentencing, where the range of jury discretion necessarily gave
rise to far greater concern over the possible effects of an
"imbalanced" jury. As we emphasized in
Witherspoon:
"[I]n Illinois, as in other States, the jury is given broad
discretion to decide whether or not death
is 'the proper
penalty' in a given case, and a juror's general views about capital
punishment play an inevitable role in any such decision."
". . . . Guided by neither rule nor standard, 'free to select or
reject as it [sees] fit,' a jury that must choose between life
imprisonment and capital punishment can do little more -- and must
do nothing less -- than express the conscience of the community on
the ultimate question of life or death."
391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 519
(emphasis in original; footnotes omitted). Because capital
sentencing under the Illinois statute involved such an exercise of
essentially unfettered discretion, we held that the State violated
the Constitution when it "crossed the
Page 476 U. S. 183
line of neutrality" and "produced a jury uncommonly willing to
condemn a man to die."
Id. at
391 U. S.
520-521.
In
Adams, we applied the same basic reasoning to the
Texas capital sentencing scheme, which, although purporting to
limit the jury's role to answering several "factual" questions, in
reality vested the jury with considerable discretion over the
punishment to be imposed on the defendant.
See 448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 46
("This process is not an exact science, and the jurors under the
Texas bifurcated procedure unavoidably exercise a range of judgment
and discretion while remaining true to their instructions and their
oaths");
cf. Jurek v. Texas, 428 U.
S. 262,
428 U. S. 273
(1976) (opinion of Stewart, POWELL, and STEVENS, JJ.) ("Texas law
essentially requires that . . . , in considering whether to impose
a death sentence, the jury may be asked to consider whatever
evidence of mitigating circumstances the defense can bring before
it"). Again, as in
Witherspoon, the discretionary nature
of the jury's task led us to conclude that the State could not
"exclude all jurors who would be in the slightest way affected
by the prospect of the death penalty or by their views about such a
penalty."
Adams, 448 U.S. at
448 U. S.
50.
In the case at bar, by contrast, we deal not with capital
sentencing, but with the jury's more traditional role of finding
the facts and determining the guilt or innocence of a criminal
defendant, where jury discretion is more channeled. We reject
McCree's suggestion that
Witherspoon and
Adams
have broad applicability outside the special context of capital
sentencing, [
Footnote 18]
and conclude that those two decisions do not support the result
reached by the Eighth Circuit here.
In our view, it is simply not possible to define jury
impartiality, for constitutional purposes, by reference to some
hypothetical mix of individual viewpoints. Prospective jurors
Page 476 U. S. 184
come from many different backgrounds, and have many different
attitudes and predispositions. But the Constitution presupposes
that a jury selected from a fair cross-section of the community is
impartial, regardless of the mix of individual viewpoints actually
represented on the jury, so long as the jurors can conscientiously
and properly carry out their sworn duty to apply the law to the
facts of the particular case. We hold that McCree's jury satisfied
both aspects of this constitutional standard. The judgment of the
Court of Appeals is therefore
Reversed.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN concurs in the result.
[
Footnote 1]
In
Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U.
S. 412 (1985), this Court emphasized that the
Constitution does not require "ritualistic adherence" to the
"talismanic" standard for juror exclusion set forth in footnote 21
of the
Witherspoon opinion. 469 U.S. at
469 U. S. 419,
423. Rather, the proper constitutional standard is simply whether a
prospective juror's views would "
prevent or substantially
impair the performance of his duties as a juror in accordance with
his instructions and his oath.'" Id. at 469 U. S. 433,
quoting Adams v. Texas, 448 U. S. 38,
448 U. S. 45
(1980). Thus, the term "Witherspoon-excludable" is
something of a misnomer. Nevertheless, because the parties and the
courts below have used the term "Witherspoon-excludables"
to identify the group of prospective jurors at issue in this case,
we will use the same term in this opinion.
[
Footnote 2]
James Grigsby, the habeas petitioner with whose case McCree's
had been consolidated, died prior to the District Court's decision,
so his case became moot.
Grigsby v. Mabry, 569 F. Supp. at
1277, n. 2. Dewayne Hulsey, a third habeas petitioner whose "death
qualification" claim was consolidated with Grigsby's and McCree's,
was found to be procedurally barred, under
Wainwright v.
Sykes, 433 U. S. 72
(1977), from asserting the claim.
Hulsey v.
Sargent, 550 F.
Supp. 179 (ED Ark.1981).
[
Footnote 3]
McCree argues that the "factual" findings of the District Court
and the Eighth Circuit on the effects of "death qualification" may
be reviewed by this Court only under the "clearly erroneous"
standard of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a). Because we do
not ultimately base our decision today on the invalidity of the
lower courts' "factual" findings, we need not decide the "standard
of review" issue. We are far from persuaded, however, that the
"clearly erroneous" standard of Rule 52(a) applies to the kind of
"legislative" facts at issue here.
See generally Dunagin v.
City of Oxford, Mississippi, 718 F.2d 738, 748, n. 8 (CA5
1983) (en banc) (plurality opinion of Reavley, J.). The difficulty
with applying such a standard to "legislative" facts is evidenced
here by the fact that at least one other Court of Appeals,
reviewing the same social science studies as introduced by McCree,
has reached a conclusion contrary to that of the Eighth Circuit.
See Keeten v. Garrison, 742 F.2d 129, 133, n. 7 (CA4 1984)
(disagreeing that studies show relationship between generalized
attitudes and behavior as jurors),
cert. pending, No.
84-6187.
[
Footnote 4]
The Court of Appeals described the following studies as
"conviction-proneness surveys": H. Zeisel, Some Data on Juror
Attitudes Toward Capital Punishment (University of Chicago
Monograph 1968) (Zeisel); W. Wilson, Belief in Capital Punishment
and Jury Performance (unpublished manuscript, University of Texas,
1964) (Wilson); Goldberg, Toward Expansion of
Witherspoon:
Capital Scruples, Jury Bias, and Use of Psychological Data to Raise
Presumptions in the Law, 5 Harv.Civ.Rights-Civ.Lib.L.Rev. 53 (1970)
(Goldberg); Jurow, New Data on the Effect of a "Death Qualified"
Jury on the Guilt Determination Process, 84 Harv.L.Rev. 567 (1971)
(Jurow); and Cowan, Thompson, & Ellsworth, The Effects of Death
Qualification on Jurors' Predisposition to Convict and on the
Quality of Deliberation, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 53 (1984)
(Cowan-Deliberation). In addition, McCree introduced evidence on
this issue from a Harris Survey conducted in 1971. Louis Harris
& Associates, Inc., Study No. 2016 (1971) (Harris-1971).
[
Footnote 5]
The Court of Appeals described the following studies as
"attitudinal and demographic surveys": Bronson, On the Conviction
Proneness and Representativeness of the Death-Qualified Jury: An
Empirical Study of Colorado Veniremen, 42 U.Colo.L.Rev. 1 (1970);
Bronson, Does the Exclusion of Scrupled Jurors in Capital Cases
Make the Jury More Likely to Convict? Some Evidence from
California, 3 Woodrow Wilson L.J. 11 (1980); Fitzgerald &
Ellsworth, Due Process vs. Crime Control: Death Qualification and
Jury Attitudes, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 31 (1984); and Precision
Research, Inc., Survey No. 1286 (1981). In addition, McCree
introduced evidence on these issues from Thompson, Cowan,
Ellsworth, & Harrrington, Death Penalty Attitudes and
Conviction Proneness, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 95 (1984); Ellsworth,
Bukaty, Cowan, & Thompson, The Death-Qualified Jury and the
Defense of Insanity, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 81 (1984); A. Young,
Arkansas Archival Study (unpublished, 1981); and various Harris,
Gallup, and National Opinion Research Center polls conducted
between 1953 and 1981.
[
Footnote 6]
McCree introduced evidence on this issue from Haney, On the
Selection of Capital Juries: The Biasing Effects of the
Death-Qualification Process, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 121 (1984).
[
Footnote 7]
We would in any event reject the argument that the very process
of questioning prospective jurors at
voir dire about their
views of the death penalty violates the Constitution. McCree
concedes that the State may challenge for cause prospective jurors
whose opposition to the death penalty is so strong that it would
prevent them from impartially determining a capital defendant's
guilt or innocence.
Ipso facto, the State must be given
the opportunity to identify such prospective jurors by questioning
them at
voir dire about their views of the death
penalty.
[
Footnote 8]
The petitioner in
Witherspoon cited the Wilson and
Goldberg studies, and a prepublication draft of the Zeisel study.
391 U.S. at 517, n. 10;
see n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 9]
The Harris-1971 study polled 2,068 adults from throughout the
United States, the Cowan-Deliberation study involved 288
jury-eligible residents of San Mateo and Santa Clara Counties in
California, and the Jurow study was based on the responses of 211
employees of the Sperry Rand Corporation in New York.
[
Footnote 10]
The Harris-1971 and Jurow studies did not allow for group
deliberation, but rather measured only individual responses.
[
Footnote 11]
JUSTICE MARSHALL's dissent refers to an "essential unanimity" of
support among social science researchers and other academics for
McCree's assertion that "death qualification" has a significant
effect on the outcome of jury deliberations at the guilt phase of
capital trials.
See post at
476 U. S. 189.
At least one of the articles relied upon by the dissent candidly
acknowledges, however, that its conclusions ultimately must rest on
"[a] certain amount of . . . conjecture" and a willingness "to
transform behavioral suspicions into doctrine." Finch &
Ferraro, The Empirical Challenge to Death-Qualified Juries: On
Further Examination, 65 Neb.L.Rev. 21, 67 (1986). As the authors of
the article explain:
"[U]ncertainty inheres in every aspect of the capital jury's
operation, whether one focuses on the method of identifying
excludable jurors or the deliberative process through which
verdicts are reached. So it is that, some seventeen years after
Witherspoon, no definitive conclusions can be stated as to
the frequency or the magnitude of the effects of death
qualification."
"
* * * *"
"Nor is it likely that further empirical research can add
significantly to the current understanding of death qualification.
The true magnitude of the phenomenon of conviction proneness is
probably unmeasurable, given the complexity of capital cases and
capital adjudication."
Id. at 66-67 (footnote omitted).
[
Footnote 12]
Only the Cowan-Deliberation study attempted to take into account
the presence of "nullifiers."
[
Footnote 13]
The effect of this flaw on the outcome of a particular study is
likely to be significant. The Cowan-Deliberation study revealed
that approximately 37% of the "
Witherspoon-excludables"
identified in the study were also "nullifiers."
[
Footnote 14]
The only case in which we have intimated that the fair
cross-section requirement might apply outside the context of jury
panels or venires,
Ballew v. Georgia, 435 U.
S. 223 (1978) (opinion of BLACKMUN, J.), did not involve
jury selection at all, but rather the
size of the petit
jury. JUSTICE BLACKMUN's opinion announcing the judgment, and the
opinions concurring in the judgment which agreed with him,
expressed the view that Georgia's limitation of the size of juries
to five "prevents juries from truly representing their
communities,"
id. at
435 U. S.
239.
[
Footnote 15]
See Rector v. State, 280 Ark. 385, 396-397,
659 S.W.2d
168, 173-174 (1983),
cert. denied, 466 U.
S. 988 (1984). McCree does not dispute the existence of
this interest, but merely contends that it is not substantial.
See Brief for Respondent 74-79.
[
Footnote 16]
McCree asserts that the State often will request the death
penalty in particular cases solely for the purpose of "death
qualifying" the jury, with the intent ultimately to "waive" the
death penalty after a conviction is obtained. We need not consider
the implications of this assertion, since the State did not "waive"
the death penalty in McCree's case.
[
Footnote 17]
The rule applied by Arkansas to exclude these prospective jurors
was scarcely a novel one; as long ago as
Logan v. United
States,144 U.S.
263 (1892), this Court approved such a practice in the federal
courts, commenting that it was also followed "by the courts of
every State in which the question has arisen."
Id. at
144 U. S.
298.
[
Footnote 18]
The majority in
Adams rejected the dissent's claim that
there was
"no plausible distinction between the role of the jury in the
guilt-innocence phase of the trial and its role, as defined by the
State of Texas, in the sentencing phase."
448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 54
(REHNQUIST, J., dissenting).
JUSTICE MARSHALL, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN and JUSTICE STEVENS
join, dissenting.
Eighteen years ago, this Court vacated the sentence of a
defendant from whose jury the State had excluded all venirepersons
expressing any scruples against capital punishment. Such a
practice, the Court held, violated the Constitution by creating a
"tribunal organized to return a verdict of death."
Witherspoon
v. Illinois, 391 U. S. 510,
391 U. S. 521
(1968). The only venirepersons who could be constitutionally
excluded from service in capital cases were those who "made
unmistakably clear . . . that they would
automatically
vote against the imposition of capital punishment" or that they
could not assess the defendant's guilt impartially.
Id. at
391 U. S.
522-523, n. 21.
Respondent contends here that the "death-qualified" jury that
convicted him, from which the State, as authorized by
Witherspoon, had excluded all venirepersons unwilling to
consider imposing the death penalty, was in effect "organized to
return a verdict" of guilty. In support of this claim, he has
presented overwhelming evidence that death-qualified juries are
substantially more likely to convict or to convict on more serious
charges than juries on which unalterable opponents of capital
punishment are permitted to serve. Respondent
Page 476 U. S. 185
does not challenge the application of
Witherspoon to
the jury in the sentencing stage of bifurcated capital cases.
Neither does he demand that individuals unable to assess
culpability impartially ("nullifiers") be permitted to sit on
capital juries. All he asks is the chance to have his guilt or
innocence determined by a jury like those that sit in noncapital
cases -- one whose composition has not been tilted in favor of the
prosecution by the exclusion of a group of prospective jurors
uncommonly aware of an accused's constitutional rights, but quite
capable of determining his culpability without favor or bias.
With a glib nonchalance ill-suited to the gravity of the issue
presented and the power of respondent's claims, the Court upholds a
practice that allows the State a special advantage in those
prosecutions where the charges are the most serious, and the
possible punishments the most severe. The State's mere announcement
that it intends to seek the death penalty if the defendant is found
guilty of a capital offense will, under today's decision, give the
prosecution license to empanel a jury especially likely to return
that very verdict. Because I believe that such a blatant disregard
for the rights of a capital defendant offends logic, fairness, and
the Constitution, I dissent.
I
Respondent is not the first to argue that "death qualification"
poses a substantial threat to the ability of a capital defendant to
receive a fair trial on the issue of his guilt or innocence. In
1961, one scholar observed that
"Jurors hesitant to levy the death penalty would . . . seem more
prone to resolve the many doubts as to guilt or innocence in the
defendant's favor than would jurors qualified on the 'pound of
flesh' approach."
Oberer, Does Disqualification of Jurors for Scruples Against
Capital Punishment Constitute Denial of Fair Trial on Issue of
Guilt?, 39 Texas L.Rev. 545, 549 (1961).
When he claimed that the exclusion of scrupled jurors from his
venire had violated his constitutional right to an impartial
Page 476 U. S. 186
jury, the petitioner in
Witherspoon v. Illinois, supra,
sought to provide empirical evidence to corroborate Oberer's
intuition.
See Brief for Petitioner in
Witherspoon v.
Illinois, O.T. 1967, No. 1015, pp. 28-33. The data on this
issue, however, consisted of only three studies and one preliminary
summary of a study. [
Footnote 2/1]
Although the data certainly supported the validity of Witherspoon's
challenge to his conviction, these studies did not provide the
Court with the firmest basis for constitutional adjudication. As a
result, while it reversed Witherspoon's death sentence, the Court
was unable to conclude that
"the exclusion of jurors opposed to capital punishment results
in an unrepresentative jury on the issue of guilt or substantially
increases the risk of conviction,"
391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 518,
and declined to reverse Witherspoon's conviction. Nonetheless, the
Court was careful to note:
"[A] defendant convicted by [a properly death-qualified] jury in
some future case might still attempt to establish that the jury was
less than neutral with respect to guilt. If he were to succeed in
that effort, the question would then arise whether the State's
interest in submitting the penalty issue to a jury capable of
imposing capital punishment may be vindicated at the expense of the
defendant's interest in a completely fair determination of guilt or
innocence -- given the possibility of accommodating both interests
by means of a bifurcated trial, using one jury to decide guilt and
another to fix punishment. That problem is not presented here,
however, and we intimate no view as to its proper resolution."
Id. at
391 U. S. 520,
n. 18.
Page 476 U. S. 187
In the wake of
Witherspoon, a number of researchers set
out to supplement the data that the Court had found inadequate in
that case. The results of these studies were exhaustively analyzed
by the District Court in this case,
see Grigsby v.
Mabry, 569 F.
Supp. 1273, 1291-1308 (ED Ark.1983) (
Grigsby II), and
can be only briefly summarized here. [
Footnote 2/2] The data strongly suggest that death
qualification excludes a significantly large subset -- at least 11%
to 17% -- of potential jurors who could be impartial during the
guilt phase of trial. [
Footnote
2/3] Among the members of this excludable class are a
disproportionate number of blacks and women.
See id. at
1283, 1293-1294.
Page 476 U. S. 188
The perspectives on the criminal justice system of jurors who
survive death qualification are systematically different from those
of the excluded jurors. Death-qualified jurors are, for example,
more likely to believe that a defendant's failure to testify is
indicative of his guilt, more hostile to the insanity defense, more
mistrustful of defense attorneys, and less concerned about the
danger of erroneous convictions.
Id. at 1283, 1293, 1304.
This pro-prosecution bias is reflected in the greater readiness of
death-qualified jurors to convict or to convict on more serious
charges.
Id. at 1294-1302;
Grigsby v. Mabry, 758
F.2d 226, 233-236 (CA8 1985). And finally, the very process of
death qualification -- which focuses attention on the death penalty
before the trial has even begun -- has been found to predispose the
jurors that survive it to believe that the defendant is guilty. 569
F.Supp. at 1302-1305; 758 F.2d at 234.
The evidence thus confirms, and is itself corroborated by, the
more intuitive judgments of scholars and of so many of the
participants in capital trials -- judges, defense attorneys, and
prosecutors.
See 569 F. Supp. at 1322. [
Footnote 2/4]
Page 476 U. S. 189
II
A
Respondent's case would, of course, be even stronger were he
able to produce data showing the prejudicial effects of death
qualification upon actual trials. Yet, until a State permits two
separate juries to deliberate on the same capital case and return
simultaneous verdicts, defendants claiming prejudice from death
qualification should not be denied recourse to the only available
means of proving their case, recreations of the
voir dire
and trial processes.
See Grigsby v. Mabry, supra, at 237
("[I]t is the courts who have often stood in the way of surveys
involving real jurors, and we should not now reject a study because
of this deficiency").
The chief strength of respondent's evidence lies in the
essential unanimity of the results obtained by researchers using
diverse subjects and varied methodologies. Even the Court's
haphazard jabs cannot obscure the power of the array. Where studies
have identified and corrected apparent flaws in prior
investigations, the results of the subsequent work have only
corroborated the conclusions drawn in the earlier efforts. Thus,
for example, some studies might be faulted for failing to
distinguish, within the class of
Witherspoon-excludables,
between nullifiers (whom respondent concedes may be excluded from
the guilt phase) and those who could assess guilt impartially. Yet
their results are entirely consistent with those obtained after
nullifiers had indeed been excluded.
See, e.g., Cowan,
Thompson, & Ellsworth, The Effects of Death Qualification on
Jurors' Predisposition to Convict and on the Quality of
Deliberation, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 53 (1984). And despite the
failure of certain studies to "allow for group deliberations,"
ante at
Page 476 U. S. 190
476 U. S. 171,
n. 10, the value of their results is underscored by the discovery
that initial verdict preferences, made prior to group
deliberations, are a fair predictor of how a juror will vote when
faced with opposition in the jury room.
See Cowan,
Thompson, & Ellsworth,
supra, at 68-69;
see
also R. Hastie, S. Penrod, & N. Pennington, Inside the
Jury 66 (1983); H. Kalven & H. Zeisel, The American Jury 488
(1966).
The evidence adduced by respondent is quite different from the
"tentative and fragmentary" presentation that failed to move this
Court in
Witherspoon. 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 517.
Moreover, in contrast to
Witherspoon, the record in this
case shows respondent's case to have been "subjected to the
traditional testing mechanisms of the adversary process,"
Ballew v. Georgia, 435 U. S. 223,
435 U. S. 246
(1978) (POWELL, J., concurring in judgment). At trial, respondent
presented three expert witnesses and one lay witness in his case in
chief, and two additional lay witnesses in his rebuttal. Testimony
by these witnesses permitted the District Court, and allows this
Court, better to understand the methodologies used here and their
limitations. Further testing of respondent's empirical case came at
the hands of the State's own expert witnesses. Yet even after
considering the evidence adduced by the State, the Court of Appeals
properly noted:
"there are no studies which contradict the studies submitted [by
respondent]; in other words, all of the documented studies support
the district court's findings."
758 F.2d at 238.
B
The true impact of death qualification on the fairness of a
trial is likely even more devastating than the studies show.
Witherspoon placed limits on the State's ability to strike
scrupled jurors for cause unless they state "unambiguously that
[they] would automatically vote against the imposition of capital
punishment, no matter what the trial might reveal," 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 516,
n. 9. It said nothing, however, about the prosecution's use of
peremptory challenges to eliminate jurors
Page 476 U. S. 191
who do not meet that standard and would otherwise survive death
qualification.
See Gillers, Deciding Who Dies, 129
U.Pa.L.Rev. 1, 85, n. 391 (1980). There is no question that
peremptories have indeed been used to this end, thereby expanding
the class of scrupled jurors excluded as a result of the
death-qualifying
voir dire challenged here.
See, e.g.,
People v. Velasquez, 26 Cal. 3d
425, 438, n. 9, 606 P.2d 341, 348, n. 9 (1980) (prosecutor
informed court during
voir dire that, if a venireperson
expressing scruples about the death penalty "were not a challenge
for cause, I would kick her off on a peremptory challenge"). The
only study of this practice has concluded:
"For the five-year period studied a
prima facie case
has been demonstrated that prosecutors in Florida's Fourth Judicial
Circuit systematically used their peremptory challenges to
eliminate from capital juries venirepersons expressing opposition
to the death penalty."
Winick, Prosecutorial Peremptory Challenge Practices in Capital
Cases: An Empirical Study and a Constitutional Analysis, 81
Mich.L.Rev. 1, 39 (1982). [
Footnote
2/5]
Judicial applications of the
Witherspoon standard have
also expanded the class of jurors excludable for cause. While the
studies produced by respondent generally classified a subject as a
Witherspoon-excludable only upon his unambiguous refusal
to vote death under any circumstance, the courts have never been so
fastidious. Trial and appellate courts have frequently excluded
jurors even in the absence of unambiguous expressions of their
absolute opposition to capital punishment. Schnapper, Taking
Witherspoon Seriously: The Search for Death-Qualified
Jurors, 62 Texas L.Rev. 977,
Page 476 U. S. 192
993-1032 (1984). And this less demanding approach will surely
become more common in the wake of this Court's decision in
Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U. S. 412
(1985). Under
Witt, a juror who does not make his attitude
toward capital punishment "unmistakably clear,"
Witherspoon, 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 522,
n. 21, may nonetheless be excluded for cause if the trial court is
left with the impression that his attitude will "
prevent or
substantially impair the performance of his duties as a juror in
accordance with his instructions and his oath.'" Witt,
supra, at 469 U. S. 433
(quoting Adams v. Texas, 448 U. S. 38,
448 U. S. 45
(1980)). It thus "seems likely that Witt will lead to more
conviction-prone panels" since
"'scrupled' jurors -- those who generally oppose the death
penalty but do not express an unequivocal refusal to impose it --
usually share the pro-defendant perspective of excludable
jurors."
See Finch & Ferraro, The Empirical Challenge to
Death Qualified Juries: On Further Examination, 65 Neb.L.Rev. 21,
63 (1986).
C
Faced with the near unanimity of authority supporting
respondent's claim that death qualification gives the prosecution a
particular advantage in the guilt phase of capital trials, the
majority here makes but a weak effort to contest that proposition.
Instead, it merely assumes, for the purposes of this opinion, "that
death qualification' in fact produces juries somewhat more
`conviction-prone' than `non-death-qualified' juries,"
ante at 476 U. S. 173,
and then holds that this result does not offend the Constitution.
This disregard for the clear import of the evidence tragically
misconstrues the settled constitutional principles that guarantee a
defendant the right to a fair trial and an impartial jury whose
composition is not biased toward the prosecution.
III
In
Witherspoon, the Court observed that a defendant
convicted by a jury from which those unalterably opposed to the
death penalty had been excluded "might still attempt to
establish
Page 476 U. S. 193
that the jury was less than neutral with respect to
guilt." 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 520,
n. 18. Respondent has done just that. And I believe he has
succeeded in proving that his trial by a jury so constituted
violated his right to an impartial jury, guaranteed by both the
Sixth Amendment and principles of due process,
see Ristaino v.
Ross, 424 U. S. 589,
424 U. S. 595,
n. 6 (1976). We therefore need not rely on respondent's alternative
argument that death qualification deprived him of a jury
representing a fair cross-section of the community. [
Footnote 2/6]
A
Respondent does not claim that any individual on the jury that
convicted him fell short of the constitutional standard for
impartiality. Rather, he contends that, by systematically excluding
a class of potential jurors less prone than the population at large
to vote for conviction, the State gave itself an unconstitutional
advantage at his trial. Thus, according to respondent, even though
a nonbiased selection procedure might have left him with a jury
composed of the very same
Page 476 U. S. 194
individuals that actually sat on his panel, the process by which
those 12 individuals were chosen violated the Constitution.
I am puzzled by the difficulty that the majority has in
understanding the "logic of the argument."
Ante at
476 U. S. 178.
For the logic is precisely that which carried the day in
Witherspoon, and which has never been repudiated by this
Court -- not even today, if the majority is to be taken at its
word. There was no question in
Witherspoon that, if the
defendant's jury had been chosen by the "luck of the draw," the
same 12 jurors who actually sat on his case might have been
selected. Nonetheless, because the State had removed from the pool
of possible jurors all those expressing general opposition to the
death penalty, the Court overturned the defendant's conviction,
declaring "that a State may not entrust the determination of
whether a man should live or die to a tribunal organized to return
a verdict of death." 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 521.
Witherspoon had been denied a fair sentencing determination, the
Court reasoned, not because any member of his jury lacked the
requisite constitutional impartiality, but because the manner in
which that jury had been selected "stacked the deck" against him.
Id. at
391 U. S. 523.
Here, respondent adopts the approach of the
Witherspoon
Court and argues simply that the State entrusted the determination
of his guilt and the level of his culpability to a tribunal
organized to convict.
The Court offers but two arguments to rebut respondent's
constitutional claim. First, it asserts that the
"State's reasons for adhering to its preference for a single
jury to decide both the guilt and penalty phases of a capital trial
are sufficient to negate the inference which the Court drew in
Witherspoon concerning the lack of any neutral
justification for the Illinois rule on jury challenges."
Ante at
391 U. S. 182.
This argument, however, does not address the question whether death
qualification infringes a defendant's constitutional interest in "a
completely fair determination of guilt or innocence,"
Page 476 U. S. 195
Witherspoon, 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 520,
n. 18. It merely indicates the state interest that must be
considered once an infringement of that constitutional interest is
found.
The Court's second reason for rejecting respondent's challenge
to the process that produced his jury is that the notion of
"neutrality" adumbrated in
Witherspoon must be confined
to
"the special context of capital sentencing, where the range of
jury discretion necessarily gave rise to far greater concern over
the possible effects of an 'imbalanced' jury."
Ante at
476 U. S. 182.
But in the wake of this Court's decision in
Adams v.
Texas, 448 U. S. 38
(1980), this distinction is simply untenable.
B
In
Adams, this Court applied the principles of
Witherspoon to the Texas death penalty scheme. Under that
scheme, if a defendant is convicted of a capital offense, a
separate sentencing proceeding is held at which additional
aggravating or mitigating evidence is admissible. The jury then
must answer three questions based on evidence adduced during either
phase of the trial:
"(1) whether the conduct of the defendant that caused the death
of the deceased was committed deliberately and with the reasonable
expectation that the death of the deceased or another would
result;"
"(2) whether there is a probability that the defendant would
commit criminal acts of violence that would constitute a continuing
threat to society; and"
"(3) if raised by the evidence, whether the conduct of the
defendant in killing the deceased was unreasonable in response to
the provocation, if any, by the deceased."
Tex.Code Crim.Proc.Ann., Art. 37.071(b) (Vernon Supp.1986).
See Adams, supra, at
448 U. S. 40-41.
If the jury finds beyond a reasonable doubt that the answer to each
of these questions is "yes," the court must impose a death
sentence; a single "no"
Page 476 U. S. 196
answer requires the court to impose a sentence of life
imprisonment. With the role of the jury so defined,
Adams
held that Texas could not constitutionally exclude every
prospective juror unable to state under oath that "the mandatory
penalty of death or imprisonment for life will not affect his
deliberations on any issue of fact." Tex.Penal Code Ann. §
12.31(b) (1974);
see Adams, supra, at
448 U. S. 42.
The "process" of answering the statutory questions, the Court
observed,
"is not an exact science, and the jurors under the Texas
bifurcated procedure unavoidably exercise a range of judgment and
discretion while remaining true to their instructions and their
oaths."
448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 46.
Consequently, while Texas could constitutionally exclude jurors
whose scruples against the death penalty left them unable "to
answer the statutory questions without conscious distortion or
bias,"
ibid., it could not exclude those
"[who] aver that they will honestly find the facts and answer
the questions in the affirmative if they are convinced beyond
reasonable doubt, but not otherwise, yet who frankly concede that
the prospects of the death penalty may affect what their honest
judgment of the facts will be or what they may deem to be a
reasonable doubt. Such assessments and judgments by jurors are
inherent in the jury system, and to exclude all jurors who would be
in the slightest way affected by the prospect of the death penalty
or by their views about such a penalty would be to deprive the
defendant of the impartial jury to which he or she is entitled
under the law."
Id. at
448 U. S.
50.
The message of
Adams is thus that, even where the role
of the jury at the penalty stage of a capital trial is limited to
what is essentially a factfinding role, the right to an impartial
jury established in
Witherspoon bars the State from
skewing the composition of its capital juries by excluding scrupled
jurors who are nonetheless able to find those facts without
distortion or bias. This proposition cannot be limited to the
penalty stage of a capital trial, for the services that Adams'
Page 476 U. S. 197
jury was called upon to perform at his penalty stage "are nearly
indistinguishable" from those required of juries at the culpability
phase of capital trials. Gillers, Proving the Prejudice of
Death-Qualified Juries after
Adams v. Texas, 47
U.Pitt.L.Rev. 219, 247 (1985). Indeed, JUSTICE REHNQUIST noted in
Adams that he could
"see no plausible distinction between the role of the jury in
the guilt/innocence phase of the trial and its role, as defined by
the State of Texas, in the sentencing phase."
448 U.S. at
448 U. S. 54
(dissenting). Contrary to the majority's suggestion,
ante
at
476 U. S. 183,
this point was at no time repudiated by the
Adams Court.
And the absence of a reply to JUSTICE REHNQUIST was not an
oversight. At the penalty stage of his trial, Adams' jury may have
been called upon to do something more than ascertain the existence
vel non of specific historical facts. Yet the role
assigned a jury at a trial's culpability phase is little different,
for there the critical task of the jury will frequently be to
determine not whether defendant actually inflicted the fatal wound,
but rather whether his level of culpability at the time of the
murder makes conviction on capital murder charges, as opposed to a
lesser count, more appropriate. Representing the conscience of the
community, the jurors at both stages "unavoidably exercise a range
of judgment and discretion while remaining true to their
instructions and their oaths." 448 U.S. at
448 U. S.
46.
Adams thus provides clear precedent for applying the
analysis of
Witherspoon to the guilt phase of a criminal
trial. Indeed, respondent's case is even stronger than
Witherspoon's. The Court in
Witherspoon merely
presumed that the exclusion of scrupled jurors would unacceptably
increase the likelihood that the defendant would be condemned to
death. Respondent here has gone much further and laid a solid
empirical basis to support his claim that the juries produced by
death qualification are substantially more likely to convict.
Page 476 U. S. 198
IV
A
One need not rely on the analysis and assumptions of
Adams and
Witherspoon to demonstrate that the
exclusion of opponents of capital punishment capable of impartially
determining culpability infringes a capital defendant's
constitutional right to a fair and impartial jury. For the same
conclusion is compelled by the analysis that, in
Ballew v.
Georgia, 435 U. S. 223
(1978), led a majority of this Court [
Footnote 2/7] to hold that a criminal conviction
rendered by a five-person jury violates the Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendments.
Faced with an effort by Georgia to reduce the size of the jury
in a criminal case beyond the six-member jury approved by this
Court in
Williams v. Florida, 399 U. S.
78 (1970), this Court articulated several facets of the
inquiry whether the reduction impermissibly "inhibit[ed] the
functioning of the jury as an institution to a significant degree."
Ballew, supra, at
435 U. S. 231. First, the Court noted that "recent
empirical data" had suggested that a five-member jury was "less
likely to foster effective group deliberation," and that such a
decline in effectiveness would likely lead "to inaccurate
factfinding and incorrect application of the common sense of the
community to the facts."
Id. at
435 U. S. 232.
The Court advanced several explanations for this phenomenon:
"As juries decrease in size . . . , they are less likely to have
members who remember each of the important pieces of evidence or
argument. Furthermore, the smaller the group, the less likely it is
to overcome the biases of its members to obtain an accurate result.
When individual and group decisionmaking were compared,
Page 476 U. S. 199
it was seen that groups performed better because prejudices of
individuals were frequently counterbalanced, and objectivity
resulted."
Id. at
435 U. S. 233
(footnotes omitted). The Court also cited empirical evidence
suggesting
"that the verdicts of jury deliberation in criminal cases will
vary as juries become smaller, and that the variance amounts to an
imbalance to the detriment of one side, the defense."
Id. at
435 U. S. 236.
Lastly, the Court observed that further reductions in jury size
would also foretell problems "for the representation of minority
groups in the community."
Ibid.
B
Each of the concerns that led this Court in
Ballew to
find that a misdemeanor defendant had been deprived of his
constitutional right to a fair trial by jury is implicated by the
process of death qualification, which threatens a defendant's
interests to an even greater extent in cases where the stakes are
substantially higher. When compared to the juries that sit in all
other criminal trials, the death-qualified juries of capital cases
are likely to be deficient in the quality of their deliberations,
the accuracy of their results, the degree to which they are prone
to favor the prosecution, and the extent to which they adequately
represent minority groups in the community.
The data considered here, as well as plain common sense, leave
little doubt that death qualification upsets the "counterbalancing
of various biases" among jurors that
Ballew identified as
being so critical to the effective functioning of juries.
Id. at
435 U. S. 234.
The evidence demonstrates that
"a person's attitude toward capital punishment is an important
indicator of a whole cluster of attitudes about crime control and
due process."
Fitzgerald & Ellsworth, Due Process vs. Crime Control: Death
Qualification and Jury Attitudes, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 31, 46
(1984). Members of the excluded group have been shown to be
significantly more concerned with the constitutional
Page 476 U. S. 200
rights of criminal defendants and more likely to doubt the
strength of the prosecution's case. No doubt because diversity
promotes controversy, which in turn leads to a closer scrutiny of
the evidence, one study found that
"the members of mixed juries [composed of
Witherspoon-excludables as well as death-qualified jurors]
remember the evidence better than the members of death-qualified
juries."
Cowan, Thompson, & Ellsworth, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. at 76.
This study found that not only is the recall of evidence by a
death-qualified jury likely to be below the standard of ordinary
juries, but its testing of that evidence will be less rigorous.
Id. at 75. It thus appears that, in the most serious
criminal cases -- those in which the State has expressed an
intention to seek the death penalty -- the ability of the jury to
find historical truth may well be impaired.
The role of a jury in criminal cases, however, is not limited to
the determination of historical facts. The task of ascertaining the
level of a defendant's culpability requires a jury to decide not
only whether the accused committed the acts alleged in the
indictment, but also the extent to which he is morally blameworthy.
Thus, especially in capital cases, where a defendant invariably
will be charged with lesser included offenses having factual
predicates similar to those of the capital murder charges,
see
Beck v. Alabama, 447 U. S. 625
(1980), it may be difficult to classify a particular verdict as
"accurate" or "inaccurate." However, the
Ballew Court went
beyond a concern for simple historical accuracy and questioned any
jury procedure that systematically operated to the "detriment of .
. . the defense." 435 U.S. at
435 U. S.
236.
With even more clarity than the data considered in
Ballew, the studies adduced by respondent show a broad
pattern of "biased decisionmaking,"
Ballew, supra, at
435 U. S. 239.
It is not merely that the jurors who survive death qualification
are more likely to accept the word of the prosecution and be
satisfied with a lower standard of proof than those who are
excluded. The death-qualified jurors are actually more likely
Page 476 U. S. 201
to convict than their peers. Whether the verdict against a
particular capital defendant will actually be different depends on
the strength of the evidence against him, the likelihood that,
absent death qualification, one or more
Witherspoon-excludables would have sat on his jury, and a
host of other factors.
See Gillers, 47 U.Pitt.L.Rev. at
232-238. However,
Ballew points to the importance of
considering the effects of a particular jury procedure over a range
of cases, and not focusing on the fairness of any single trial.
Because it takes only one juror unwilling to find that the
prosecution has met its burden for a trial to end in either a
mistrial or a compromise verdict,
"it can be confidently asserted that, over time, some persons
accused of capital crimes will be convicted of offenses -- and to a
higher degree -- who would not be so convicted"
had all persons able to assess their guilt impartially been
permitted to sit on their juries.
Hovey v. Superior
Court, 28 Cal. 3d 1,
25, n. 57, 616 P.2d 1301, 1314, n. 57 (1980).
Death qualification also implicates the
Ballew Court's
concern for adequate representation of minority groups. Because
opposition to capital punishment is significantly more prevalent
among blacks than among whites, the evidence suggests that death
qualification will disproportionately affect the representation of
blacks on capital juries. Though perhaps this effect may not be
sufficient to constitute a violation of the Sixth Amendment's fair
cross-section principle,
see Duren v. Missouri,
439 U. S. 357,
439 U. S.
363-364 (1979), it is similar in magnitude to the
reduction in minority representation that the
Ballew Court
found to be of "constitutional significance" to a defendant's right
to a fair jury trial, 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 239.
See White, Death-Qualified Juries: The "Prosecution
Proneness" Argument Reexamined, 41 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 353, 387-389
(1980).
The principle of "impartiality" invoked in
Witherspoon
is thus not the only basis for assessing whether the exclusion of
jurors unwilling to consider the death penalty but able
impartially
Page 476 U. S. 202
to determine guilt infringes a capital defendant's
constitutional interest in a fair trial. By identifying the
critical concerns that are subsumed in that interest, the
Ballew Court pointed to an alternative approach to the
issue, drawing on the very sort of empirical data that respondent
has presented here. And viewed in light of the concerns articulated
in
Ballew, the evidence is sufficient to establish that
death qualification constitutes a substantial threat to a
defendant's Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment right to a fair jury
trial -- a threat constitutionally acceptable only if justified by
a sufficient state interest.
C
Respondent's challenge to the impartiality of death-qualified
juries focuses upon the imbalance created when jurors particularly
likely to look askance at the prosecution's case are systematically
excluded from panels. He therefore appears to limit his
constitutional claim to only those cases in which jurors have
actually been struck for cause because of their opposition to the
death penalty. Tr. of Oral Arg. 26. However, this limitation should
not blind the Court to prejudice that occurs even in cases in which
no juror has in fact been excluded for refusing to consider the
death penalty.
There is considerable evidence that the very process of
determining whether any potential jurors are excludable for cause
under
Witherspoon predisposes jurors to convict. One study
found that exposure to the
voir dire needed for death
qualification "increased subjects' belief in the guilt of the
defendant and their estimate that he would be convicted." Haney, On
the Selection of Capital Juries: The Biasing Effects of the
Death-Qualification Process, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 121, 128
(1984).
See Hovey, supra, at 73, 616 P.2d at 1349. Even if
this prejudice to the accused does not constitute an independent
due process violation, it surely should be taken into account in
any inquiry into the effects of death qualification.
"[T]he process effect may function additively
Page 476 U. S. 203
to worsen the perspective of an already conviction-prone jury
whose composition has been distorted by the outcome of this
selection process. . . ."
Haney, Examining Death Qualification: Further Analysis of the
Process Effect, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 133, 151 (1984).
The majority contends that any prejudice attributed to the
process of death-qualifying jurors is justified by the State's
interest in identifying and excluding nullifiers before the guilt
stage of trial.
Ante at
476 U. S. 170,
n. 7. It overlooks, however, the ease with which nullifiers could
be identified before trial without any extended focus on how jurors
would conduct themselves at a capital sentencing proceeding.
Potential jurors could be asked, for example,
"if there be any reason why any of them could not fairly and
impartially try the issue of defendant's guilt in accordance with
the evidence presented at the trial and the court's instructions as
to the law."
Grigsby II, 569 F. Supp. at 1310. [
Footnote 2/8] The prejudice attributable to the
current pretrial focus on the death penalty should therefore be
considered here, and provides but another reason for concluding
that death qualification infringes a capital defendant's "interest
in a completely fair determination of guilt or innocence."
Witherspoon, 391 U.S. at
391 U. S. 520,
n. 18.
V
As the
Witherspoon Court recognized, "the State's
interest in submitting the penalty issue to a jury capable of
imposing capital punishment" may be accommodated without infringing
a capital defendant's interest in a fair determination of his guilt
if the State uses "one jury to decide guilt and another to
Page 476 U. S. 204
fix punishment."
Ibid. Any exclusion of death penalty
opponents, the Court reasoned, could await the penalty phase of a
trial. The question here is thus whether the State has other
interests that require the use of a single jury and demand the
subordination of a capital defendant's Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendment rights.
The only two reasons that the Court invokes to justify the
State's use of a single jury are efficient trial management and
concern that a defendant at his sentencing proceedings may be able
to profit from "residual doubts" troubling jurors who have sat
through the guilt phase of his trial. The first of these purported
justifications is merely unconvincing. The second is offensive.
In
Ballew, the Court found that the State's interest in
saving "court time and . . . financial costs" was insufficient to
justify further reductions in jury size. 435 U.S. at
435 U. S.
243-244. The same is true here. The additional costs
that would be imposed by a system of separate juries are not
particularly high.
"First, capital cases constitute a relatively small number of
criminal trials. Moreover, the number of these cases in which a
penalty determination will be necessary is even smaller. A penalty
determination will occur only where a verdict on guilt has been
returned that authorizes the possible imposition of capital
punishment, and only where the prosecutor decides that a death
sentence should be sought. Even in cases in which a penalty
determination will occur, the impaneling of a new penalty jury may
not always be necessary. In some cases, it may be possible to have
alternate jurors replace any 'automatic life imprisonment' jurors
who served at the guilt determination trial."
Winick, 81 Mich.L.Rev. at 57.
In a system using separate juries for guilt and penalty phases,
time and resources would be saved every time a capital case did not
require a penalty phase. The
voir dire
Page 476 U. S. 205
needed to identify nullifiers before the guilt phase is less
extensive than the questioning that under the current scheme is
conducted before
every capital trial. The State could, of
course, choose to empanel a death-qualified jury at the start of
every trial, to be used only if a penalty stage is required.
However, if it opted for the cheaper alternative of empaneling a
death-qualified jury only in the event that a defendant were
convicted of capital charges, the State frequently would be able to
avoid retrying the entire guilt phase for the benefit of the
penalty jury. Stipulated summaries of prior evidence might, for
example, save considerable time. Thus, it cannot fairly be said
that the costs of accommodating a defendant's constitutional rights
under these circumstances are prohibitive, or even significant.
Even less convincing is the Court's concern that a defendant be
able to appeal at sentencing to the "residual doubts" of the jurors
who found him guilty. Any suggestion that the current system of
death qualification
"may be in the defendant's best interests, seems specious unless
the state is willing to grant the defendant the option to waive
this paternalistic protection in exchange for better odds against
conviction."
Finch & Ferraro, 65 Neb.L.Rev. at 69. Furthermore, this case
will stand as one of the few times in which any legitimacy has been
given to the power of a convicted capital defendant facing the
possibility of a death sentence to argue as a mitigating factor the
chance that he might be innocent. Where a defendant's sentence, but
not his conviction, has been set aside on appeal, States have
routinely empaneled juries whose only duty is to assess punishment,
thereby depriving defendants of the chance to profit from the
"residual doubts" that jurors who had already sat through a guilt
phase might bring to the sentencing proceeding. In its statute
authorizing resentencing without any reassessment of culpability,
Arkansas has noted: "it is a waste of judicial resources to require
the retrying of an error-free trial if the State wishes to seek to
reimpose the death penalty." 1983 Ark. Gen. Act.
Page 476 U. S. 206
No. 546, § 3, note following Ark.Rev.Stat.Ann. §
41-1358 (Supp.1985).
But most importantly, it ill-behooves the majority to allude to
a defendant's power to appeal to "residual doubts" at his
sentencing when this Court has consistently refused to grant
certiorari in state cases holding that these doubts cannot properly
be considered during capital sentencing proceedings.
See Burr
v. Florida, 474 U. S. 879
(1985) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari);
Heiney v. Florida, 469 U. S. 920
(1984) (MARSHALL, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari);
Burford v. State, 403 So. 2d 943
(Fla.1981),
cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1164 (1982). Any
suggestion that capital defendants will benefit from a single jury
thus is more than disingenuous. It is cruel.
VI
On occasion, this Court has declared what I believe should be
obvious -- that, when a State seeks to convict a defendant of the
most serious and severely punished offenses in its criminal code,
any procedure that "diminish[es] the reliability of the guilt
determination" must be struck down.
Beck v. Alabama, 447
U.S. at
447 U. S. 638.
But in spite of such declarations, I cannot help thinking that
respondent here would have stood a far better chance of prevailing
on his constitutional claims had he not been challenging a
procedure peculiar to the administration of the death penalty. For
in no other context would a majority of this Court refuse to find
any constitutional violation in a state practice that
systematically operates to render juries more likely to convict,
and to convict on the more serious charges. I dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The
Witherspoon Court had before it only a preliminary
summary of the results of H. Zeisel, Some Data on Juror Attitudes
Towards Capital Punishment (University of Chicago Monograph 1968),
"not the data nor the analysis that underlay his conclusions, nor
indeed his final conclusions themselves."
Hovey v. Superior
Court, 28 Cal. 3d 1,
30, n. 63, 616 P.2d 1301, 1317, n. 63 (1980).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Most of the Studies presented here were also comprehensively
summarized in
Hovey v. Superior Court, Supra. Because the
California Supreme Court found the studies had not accounted for
jurors who could be excluded because they would automatically vote
for the death penalty where possible, that court ultimately
rejected a defendant's constitutional challenge to death
qualification.
But see Kadane, After
Hovey: A
Note on Taking Account of the Automatic Death Penalty Jurors, 8 Law
& Hum.Behav. 115 (1984).
[
Footnote 2/3]
Bronson, On the Conviction Proneness and Representativeness of
the Death-Qualified Jury: An Empirical Study of Colorado Veniremen,
12 U.Colo.L.Rev. 1 (1970) (using classification only approximating
Witherspoon standard, and finding 11% of subjects
Witherspoon-excludable); Bronson, Does the Exclusion of
Scrupled Jurors in Capital Cases Make the Jury More Likely to
Convict? Some Evidence from California, 3 Woodrow Wilson L.J. 11
(1980) (using more appropriate
Witherspoon question and
finding 93% overlap of "strongly opposed" group in prior Bronson
study with
Witherspoon-excludables); Jurow, New Data on
the Effect of a "Death-Qualified Jury" on the Guilt Determination
Process, 84 Harv.L.Rev. 567 (1971) (finding only 10% of sample
excludable, but likely to have underestimated size of class in
general population because sample 99% white and 80% male);
Fitzgerald & Ellsworth, Due Process vs. Crime Control: Death
Qualification and Jury Attitudes, 8 Law & Hum.Behav. 31 (1984)
(random sample with nullifiers screened out finding 17% still
excludable under
Witherspoon); A. Young, Arkansas Archival
Study (unpublished, 1981) (14% of jurors questioned in
voir
dire transcripts excludable); Precision Research, Inc., Survey
No. 1286 (1981) (11% excludable, not counting nullifiers);
see 569 F. Supp. at 1285;
Grigsby v. Mabry, 758
F.2d 226, 231 (CA8 1985).
[
Footnote 2/4]
The Court reasons that, because the State did not "waive" the
death penalty in respondent's case, we "need not consider the
implications" of respondent's assertion that
"the State often will request the death penalty in particular
cases solely for the purpose of 'death-qualifying' the jury, with
the intent ultimately to 'waive' the death penalty after a
conviction is obtained."
Ante at
476 U. S. 176,
n. 16. If, by this, the Court intended to limit the effects of its
decision to the case pending before us, I would gladly join that
effort. However, I see all too few indications in the Court's
opinion that future constitutional challenges to death-qualified
juries stand much chance of success here. In view of the sweep of
the Court's opinion and the fact that, in any particular case, a
defendant will never be able to demonstrate with any certainty that
the prosecution's decision to seek the death penalty was merely a
tactical ruse, I find the Court's refusal to consider the potential
for this abuse rather disingenuous.
See Grigsby v.
Mabry, 483 F.
Supp. 1372, 1389, n. 24 (ED Ark.1980) (
Grigsby I)
(suggesting possibility that prosecutor had initially sought death
penalty merely to get more conviction-prone, death-qualified jury).
Cf. Oberer, Does Disqualification of Jurors for Scruples
Against Capital Punishment Constitute Denial of Fair Trial on Issue
of Guilt?, 39 Texas L.Rev. 545, 555, n. 45b (1961) (reporting
testimony of one prosecutor that there might be other prosecutors
who death-qualified a jury "without hope of obtaining a death
verdict, but in the expectation that a jury so selected would
impose a higher penalty than might otherwise be obtained").
[
Footnote 2/5]
At this point, the remedy called for is not the wholesale
removal of the prosecution's power to make peremptory challenges,
but merely the elimination of death qualification.
But cf.
Batson v. Kentucky, ante p.
476 U. S. 102
(MARSHALL, J., concurring). Without the extensive
voir
dire now allowed for death qualification, the prosecution
would lack sufficient information to be able to expand the scope of
Witherspoon through the use of peremptories.
See
476
U.S. 162fn2/8|>n. 8,
infra.
[
Footnote 2/6]
With respect to the Court's discussion of respondent's fair
cross-section claim, however, I must note that there is no basis in
either precedent or logic for the suggestion that a state law
authorizing the prosecution before trial to exclude from jury
service all, or even a substantial portion of, the members of a
"distinctive group" would not constitute a clear infringement of a
defendant's Sixth Amendment right.
"The desired interaction of a cross-section of the community
does not take place within the venire; it is only effectuated by
the jury that is selected and sworn to try the issues."
McCray v. New York, 461 U.S. 961, 968 (1983) (MARSHALL,
J., dissenting from denial of certiorari);
see McCray v.
Abrams, 760 F.2d 1113, 1128-1129 (CA2 1984),
cert.
pending, No. 84-1426. The right to have a particular group
represented on venires is of absolutely no value if every member of
that group will automatically be excluded from service as soon as
he is found to be a member of that group. Whether a violation of
the fair cross-section requirement has occurred can hardly turn on
when the wholesale exclusion of a group takes place. If, for
example, blacks were systematically struck from petit juries
pursuant to state law, the effect -- and the infringement of a
defendant's Sixth Amendment rights -- would be the same as if they
had never been included on venires in the first place.
[
Footnote 2/7]
Although the opinion of JUSTICE BLACKMUN in
Ballew was
cosigned by only JUSTICE STEVENS, three other Justices specifically
joined that opinion "insofar as it holds that the Sixth and
Fourteenth Amendments require juries in criminal trials to contain
more than five persons." 435 U.S. at
435 U. S. 246
(opinion of BRENNAN, J., joined by Stewart and MARSHALL, JJ.).
[
Footnote 2/8]
Restriction of
voir dire to this inquiry would limit
the ability of the prosecution to use its peremptory challenges to
strike those jurors who would have been excluded for cause under
the current system of death qualification. And the power of this
inquiry to root out
all prejudices and biases, no matter
how great a threat they pose to the fairness of a guilt
determination, has only recently been established by this Court as
a matter of law.
See Turner v. Murray, ante, p.
476 U. S. 28.
But see ante at
476 U. S. 45
(MARSHALL, J., concurring in judgment in part and dissenting in
part).