Court Opinion

ID: 9444480
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-03 21:02:09.329828+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:29:53.132405
License: Public Domain

EDGERTON, Circuit Judge
(dissenting).
The prosecuting attorney said to the jury:
“Now, when I say to you about the seriousness of this case, in asking for the death penalty I want to try to impress upon you as to this seriousness. Of course, we tried to bring it home to each individual and, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, put yourself in the position of this girl, say a daughter of yours—
“Mr. Margolius: I object.
“The Court: The objection is overruled.
“Mr. McLaughlin [prosecuting attorney]: Put yourself in this situation as though this was your wife. Put yourself in the position that for some reason or other you were working that night, or away from home that night, and your wife was there alone and about 5 or 6 o’clock that morning you receive a telephone call telling you what happened in your house? What frame of mind would you be in? Would you think it was serious?
“ * * * it is for each of you here in these cases to decide whether or not we are going to have law and order. * * * So I say consider this case, and consider it seriously, because when you leave here at the end of the month and you go about your daily work there are going to be times when you say to yourselves, T wonder what those jurors are doing down there. I wonder if those jurors by their oaths and by their decisions in these cases are protecting me and my family’ * * *. I say to you, and I hope it never happens to any of us, what would you do, man, woman or child, if you were lying in your bed at night in what you think is the security of your home and you are awakened and you see someone there with a knife of this type? What would you do? If you escaped, regardless of what this individual insisted upon then doing, the only thing, would you say next day to yourself, or some of your friends, ‘It was only by the grace of God that that man did not cut my throat?’
“So, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, from the evidence in this case, and again I want to impress upon you this girl is lying in her own bed, in her own home, where she had a right to be and, as I say, if you lived in that neighborhood it could just as well have been one member of your family. * * * ”
This “argument” was grossly improper. It could have no other purpose or tendency than to arouse the passions and prejudices of the jury. It had nothing to do with the guilt or innocence of the defendant. The jury were not admonished to ignore it. In my opinion it is so prejudicial that it requires reversal of the conviction.
In other respects I concur in the opinion of the court.