State of Maine v. Hastings

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 26, 2022
DocketOXFcr-20-250
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Maine v. Hastings (State of Maine v. Hastings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Maine v. Hastings, (Me. Super. Ct. 2022).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE UNIFIED CRIMINAL DOCKET OXFORD, ss. DOCKET NO. OXFCD-CR-20-250

STATE OF MAINE ) ) ) ORDER ON MOTION TO VACATE V. ) VERDICT AND FOR NEW TRIAL ) ) BRETT HASTINGS )

Introduction Defendant Brett Hastings has moved for a new trial. His motion is based on

information he received after trial that one of the jurors commented, regarding the

defendant, "He looks like one of [']em Iraqies [sic] or Saudies [sic], hang him." For

the following reasons, the defendant's motion is GRANTED.

Procedural History The defendant was charged by indictment with aggravated assault, domestic

violence assault, domestic violence criminal threatening, and criminal mischief in

connection with an incident that was alleged to have taken place on May 27, 2020,

in Woodstock, Maine. The court conducted jury selection on June 8 and 10, 2022,

and empaneled a jury of twelve members with three alternates.1 The trial began on

June 21, 2022, and lasted for two days. The jury returned a guilty verdict on all

counts on the afternoon of June 22.

1 One of the alternate jurors did not show up for trial.

1 By a filing dated July 6, 2022, the defendant moved to vacate the verdict and

for a new trial.2 Attached to the defendant's motion was an e-mail from an

alternate juror reporting a comment that a Hastings juror allegedly made to her at

jury selection. The court subsequently conducted a telephonic conference with

counsel for both parties. The court and the parties agreed that the e-mail from the

alternate juror warranted further investigation.

As a result, counsel and the court met in chambers on July 14, 2022, to

interview the alternate juror. Based on that interview, the court and parties

identified Juror No. 169 as the person about whom the alternate juror made her

report. On July 20, 2022, the court interviewed Juror No. 169 with the lawyers in

attendance. On July 29, 2022, again with the lawyers present, the court

interviewed five other members of the jury. On August 5, 2022, the lawyers were in

attendance when the court interviewed two more jurors, one of them by

videoconference. By that point, the court had met with nine of the 14 individuals

who had participated in trial as jurors or alternates. The interviews were

conducted on the record, in camera, with the court placing each interviewee under

oath. On each occasion, the court solicited proposed questions from the attorneys in

advance and, during each interview, allowed the lawyers to propose additional

questions based on what they had heard.

2 M.R. Crim. P. 33 requires a motion for a new trial to be made within 14 days after the verdict "or within such further time as the court may fix during the 14-day period." Although the defendant's motion is dated July 6, 2022, it appears that the court received it on July 8, 2022. The State, however, has not raised a timeliness bar to the defendant's motion. 2 Although the Clerk's Office contacted all 14 of the seated jurors and

alternates, one refused to participate in the interviews and four did not return the

court's telephone call. With the agreement of counsel, the court concluded its

investigation after conducting the nine interviews and did not attempt to force the

remaining jurors to participate.

The court permitted the parties to file supplemental briefs addressing the

information learned during the juror interviews. The State opposes the defendant's

request for a new trial. Neither party requested oral argument and the court has

determined that oral argument is not necessary.

Facts According to the defendant, he was born to one white parent and one Mexican

parent. He has brown skin, and dark hair and eyes. The indictment lists the

defendant's race as "[w]hite." The defendant did not alert the court to any mistake

in the indictment prior to trial. 3 As a result, at jury selection, the court did not ask

prospective jurors any questions designed to identify possible racial biases.

The alternate juror was empaneled with the rest of the jury on June 10, 2022.

She did not know of her status as an alternate until she was discharged at the close

of evidence. She has worked as a legal assistant for a local attorney for

approximately six years. The alternate juror was excited to be selected for the jury.

She considers jury service to be an important civic duty.

3 Defense counsel indicates that he was "blind" to this issue until he received the e-mail from the alternate juror, at which point he confirmed with the defendant's family that the defendant is biracial. Motion to Vacate ("Mot.") at 2.

3 On either the second day of jury selection or the first day of trial, after the

jurors had seen the defendant, the alternate juror heard another juror comment4:

"He looks like one of [']em Iraqies [sic] or Saudies [sic], hang him." 5 Although the

alternate juror was troubled by this comment, she did not report it during the trial

because she did not know how to do so. The alternate did not hear any other juror

make any comment regarding the defendant's race. She also did not hear any of the

jurors discuss the evidence during the trial or otherwise engage in premature

deliberations. The alternate was excused before the jury deliberated. She was

4 The alternate juror had trouble remembering whether the comment was made at jury selection or once the trial had begun, but her best memory was that the trial had begun. Compare Chambers Conf. Tr., July 14, 2022, 12:10-13:14 (describing comment as having been made during jury selection and recalling her "hope that that person [who made the comment] isn't picked [for the jury]") with id. at 44:11-46:16 (clarifying that she believed comment was made on the first trial day, and that when she heard the comment, she hoped the juror "was an alternate and not going to deliberations"). The defendant was introduced to the jury panel on the second day of jury selection. He was also present in the courtroom for both days of trial. The alternate was certain that the person who made the comment ultimately served on the jury.

5 This is the phrasing the alternate juror used in her e-mail of June 24, 2022, where she wrote: "I feel the 'jury, or member (s) of came across as prejudice[d] toward defendant stating 'he looks like one [']em Iraqies [sic] or Saudies [sic], hang him. Others in room laughed. I was unsure if it was a joke or true feelings, until I heard their verdicts on all 4 counts." Exhibit B to Mot.

When she was interviewed on July 14, the alternate juror reported the comment as: "Well, look, he looks likeD he's from IraqO or Iran or, you know, that area, we should hang him." Chambers Conf. Tr., July 14, 2022, 12:25-13:1-2. Although the court credits the alternate juror's earlier recitation of the comment because it was made closer in time to jury selection and trial, the substance of the comments is similar, and the exact wording does not affect the court's analysis.

4 disappointed to have been excused, but not angry or upset by it, as she understood

the importance of having alternates on the jury.

On June 24, 2022, two days after the guilty verdict, she sent an e-mail to her

boss. The same day, the attorney forwarded that e-mail to defense counsel in this

case. In the e-mail, the alternate described the racially biased comment she heard

and opined that certain members of the jury did not view the defendant with "open

minds." Exhibit B to Mot.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Maine v. Hastings, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-maine-v-hastings-mesuperct-2022.