United States v. Audrey Bailey

834 F.2d 218, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15727, 1987 WL 4585
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1987
Docket87-1023
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 834 F.2d 218 (United States v. Audrey Bailey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Audrey Bailey, 834 F.2d 218, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15727, 1987 WL 4585 (1st Cir. 1987).

Opinion

LEVIN H. CAMPBELL, Chief Judge.

Defendant-appellant Audrey Bailey was indicted and convicted on one count of corruptly endeavoring to influence a juror in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1503 (1982). 1 The government’s principal witness was Nancy Grant, the juror whom Bailey allegedly tried to influence. Grant was a neighbor and acquaintance of Bailey’s in a housing project near Boston.

Grant testified substantially as follows. Grant had been sitting in Boston as a juror in a lengthy, highly publicized federal criminal case known as United States v. Angi ulo. One Saturday morning in February 1986, when the Angiulo trial was reaching the stage at which the case was about to be submitted to the jury, Bailey came to Grant’s apartment and invited Grant to “Name your price. Name your figure.” Grant inferred that someone had sent Bailey to make this proposition. As soon as Bailey left the premises, Grant reported the conversation to a neighbor. Bailey followed up this visit with a phone call the same evening, asking Grant if she had “thought about it.” Grant’s response to Bailey on each occasion was along the lines of “you’ve got to be kidding.”

The next morning Grant telephoned Bailey and told her, “No way, shape, or form.” She added that Bailey would be in serious trouble once the judge learned of her proposition, a censure to which Bailey responded with words of apparent remorse. Grant reported Bailey’s overture to the presiding judge, who immediately dismissed Grant from service on the Angiulo jury.

The government called three additional witnesses. District court clerk Robert Lo-vett testified about the circumstances of Grant’s disclosure to the Angiulo court of Bailey’s proposition. Barbara Phillips, Bailey’s supervisor at Community Workshops, an employment rehabilitation center, testified that a few days before Bailey’s overture to Grant, Bailey had told Phillips ’of a conversation with Bailey’s own daughter. The daughter told Bailey there might be “something in it” for Bailey if she were to approach one of the jurors she knew. The third witness was Mary Tegan, Nancy Grant's next-door neighbor, who testified that Grant had informed her of Bailey’s proposition.

The defense called one witness. Betty Adams, a neighbor and acquaintance of both Bailey and Grant, testified that Grant had a reputation for untruthfulness. She also testified that during the time Grant was serving on the Angiulo jury Grant once remarked that if she were offered enough money she could sway the verdict.

Bailey makes five main arguments on appeal. First, she contends that the district court's refusal to provide her with the names and addresses of the jurors who sat with Grant during the Angiulo case violated her constitutional right to present her defense. Second, the district court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on the *221 defense of abandonment. Third, hearsay testimony was erroneously admitted into evidence. Fourth, the prosecutor made improper remarks in his closing argument. And fifth, the district court erred by excluding evidence of Grant’s violation of her juror’s oath.

We retain jurisdiction and remand on the first of Bailey’s claims of error, and reject the others. We discuss these contentions seriatim.

I. JUROR INTERVIEWS

In a pretrial motion, Bailey requested the court to order the government to provide to her, inter alia, the names and addresses of the petit jurors in the Angiulo case, the case on which Nancy Grant had been sitting as a juror when Bailey allegedly tried to influence her. The government opposed the request, noting that the district court in Angiulo had impounded the names of the jurors and may have entered a protective order prohibiting contact with these jurors or disclosure of their names. The request was denied by a magistrate. Bailey moved the district court for reconsideration of the magistrate’s ruling, arguing that a chance to interview the jurors with whom Grant had been sitting for eight months before Bailey’s alleged approach was essential to the preparation of her defense. She stressed that Grant was the government’s chief witness, and that she wished to explore the jurors’ perceptions of the character and credibility of Nancy Grant, and to learn of any remarks Grant may have made to her fellow jurors indicative of a disposition to fabricate testimony against Bailey. Bailey agreed that these interviews might be held under court supervision, but wanted them to be ex parte, a proposal opposed by the government. The court denied Bailey’s motion for reconsideration of the magistrate’s ruling, 2 and a week later denied Bailey’s subsequent motion for reconsideration of the court’s decision. During the trial, however, Bailey was given leave to conduct a very limited interview with two of the jurors about a specific incident. 3

On appeal, Bailey essentially reiterates her argument that was unsuccessful below. She says that denying her access to these jurors violated her constitutional right to present a defense. Bailey argues that the jurors, by virtue of their close contact with Nancy Grant over their eight months of shared jury duty, were a potentially potent source of information on, inter alia, (1) Grant’s credibility, and (2) any motive or disposition Grant may have had to fabricate the charges against Audrey Bailey.

A. Applicability of ‘Kepreos’

The government relies heavily on United States v. Kepreos, 759 F.2d 961 (1st Cir. 1985), to defend the court’s pretrial ruling. In Kepreos, the prosecutor surreptitiously interviewed jurors who had previously served on a hung jury, so as better to prepare for a forthcoming new trial. A panel of this court announced a prophylactic rule that, “this Circuit prohibits the postverdict interview of jurors by counsel, litigants or their agents except under supervision of the district court, and then only in such extraordinary situations as are deemed appropriate.” Id. at 967. There had been in Kepreos no advance impoundment of the interviewed jurors’ names and addresses, nor any prior judicial protective order barring juror interviews. We said, nonetheless, that “[permitting the unbridled interviewing of jurors could easily lead to their harassment, to the exploitation of their thought processes, and to diminished confidence in jury verdicts, as well as to *222 unbalanced trial results [i.e., in the successor trial] depending unduly on the relative resources of the parties.” Id.

The government argues that the pronouncement in Kepreos forbade juror interviews here. Alternatively, the government submits that even if this were the “extraordinary situation” which, under Kepreos,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
834 F.2d 218, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 15727, 1987 WL 4585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-audrey-bailey-ca1-1987.