Opinion ID: 1769389
Heading Depth: 2
Heading Rank: 1

Heading: Issue # 1: Whether a Mistrial Should Have Been Granted After Some Jurors Read a Newspaper Account of the Case?

Text: The trial in this case transpired over a two-day period. On the second day of the trial  October 5, 1988  The Clarion-Ledger distributed the morning edition which contained the following front-page headline: Rankin County 9-year-old tells jury of incest with his mother. The accompanying article recounted testimony and other evidence presented in the jury's presence on October 4  the first day of the trial. This article continued on the back page. The back page contained information disclosed during proceedings held outside the jury's presence. That morning (October 5), the trial judge addressed the jury regarding this article: Yesterday, when we adjourned, I neglected when I was cautioning you not to discuss the case among yourselves or with anyone else, I neglected to remind you not to read anything about the case, if there was anything about it, not to watch anything about the case on television, ... or listen to it on the radio... . Ordinarily, I do that. For some reason, I did not yesterday. One reason is that I had no idea that the case would receive as extensive news coverage as it did... . So, in view of the coverage..., it would be my duty to ask each of you whether or not you read or heard or saw anything about the case in the news last night or this morning and whether or not anything that you may have read or seen or heard would have any influence or any bearing on your decision in this case... . Vol. II, at 125-27. The judge polled the jurors  four of whom responded that they had seen, glanced at, skimmed, or read the newspaper article. Id. at 127-32. The judge then interviewed these four jurors  individually and alone. Id. at 141-48. Juror Pittman admitted: (1) that he had read the headline and practically all of the front page; (2) that he did not read beyond that because he was in a hurry; and (3) that nothing he had read would influence [his] decision in this case. Id. at 141. Juror Myers admitted that he had read only the headline and had not discussed the contents of the article with anyone. Id. at 142. Juror Massey admitted that he had [o]pened the paper, saw the headlines, and started to skim the front [page], decided that [he] didn't need to do this and closed it up. He added that he had not discussed the article with anyone and that the portion of the article which he had skimmed would not affect [his] opinion in the case. Id. at 143. Finally, Juror West admitted that he had read the entire article and that he had not discussed it with any of the other jurors. Id. at 144. Wanda moved for a mistrial  which the judge denied: Based on my interrogations to the jury, both as to the entire panel this morning and as to the four jurors who indicated that they had read all or, had read some or all of The Clarion-Ledger article this morning, it is my opinion that there's nothing in the article which the jurors have not heard from the witness stand, except for that paragraph on the [back] page which indicates that out of the presence of the jury some comments were made in regard to the Defendant's sexual involvement with her younger son, James. That information has been excluded from consideration by the jury pursuant to the Defendant's motion in limine. The only juror who indicated that he read that part of the article was ... West [who] assured the Court that that would not influence [him], and I have no reason to doubt it; however, he was exposed to information which was excluded from consideration by the jury, so I have, I will deny the motion for mistrial; however, I will excuse Mr. West as a juror in this case and substitute ... Myers, the alternate juror, in his place. Vol. II, at 147-48. Later, the judge again admonished the jury: Ladies and gentlemen, both sides have now rested which means that you have heard all of the evidence in the case... . [D]o not discuss the case even among yourselves. Do not discuss it with anyone else. Do not permit anyone to discuss the case with you, attempt to do so, or to discuss it with others in your presence. Please do not read anything about the case in the newspaper... . Id. at 188-89. Wanda now contends that the only fair and proper action of the trial court would have been to grant [her] motion ... for a mistrial. Appellant's Brief at 20.
This Court's opinion in Hannah v. State is dispositive of this issue. 336 So.2d 1317 (Miss. 1976). In Hannah, the defendant moved for a mistrial on the basis that at least one of the jurors had gained access to a local newspaper containing a front-page article about the ongoing trial. Scott County Circuit Court Judge Roy Noble Lee investigated the matter and found there was no proof that any juror except the one had access [to the newspaper containing the article] and no proof that this juror had read the article. Judge Lee denied the motion after concluding [h]e was of the opinion that exposure to the [article] by this juror did not impinge upon the right of the defendant to a fair trial. [1] 336 So.2d at 1323. On appeal, this Court affirmed. Id.
In the case sub judice, neither Wanda nor the State disputes the fact that: (1) the front page of The Clarion-Ledger contained only information which the jury had previously received, and (2) the back page contained information which had been withheld from the jury. The dispute thus focuses on whether the jurors read the back page. Like Hannah, the record in the case sub judice contains absolutely no proof of Wanda's contention that the jurors read or may have read the back page, and the one juror who did read the entire article was promptly dismissed. Thus, in the absence of proof and under authority of Hannah, this Court holds that the judge's decision did not constitute an abuse of discretion.