United States v. Breland

522 F. Supp. 468
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedNovember 25, 1981
DocketCrim. A. 79-129A, 17-154A, 81-02G, 80- 05A, 81-06A, 81-11A, 81-15R, 81-23R, 81- 29A, 81-62A, 81-98A, 81-146A, 80-151A, 80-152A and 81-153A
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 522 F. Supp. 468 (United States v. Breland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Breland, 522 F. Supp. 468 (N.D. Ga. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KEADY, Chief Judge, Sitting by Designation.

In this consolidated hearing, the court is presented with the common question raised by all defendants that the indictments returned against them should be dismissed because of alleged unconstitutional under-representation in the selection of grand jury forepersons by the District Judges of the Northern District of Georgia. This issue was reserved in our former consolidated hearing, United States v. Northside Realty-Associates, Inc., 510 F.Supp. 668 (N.D.Ga. 1981), in which the court dismissed 34 indictments because of substantial noncompliance with the Jury Selection and Service Act of 1968, 28 U.S.C. § 1861 et seq. and the District’s Local Plan. 1

Unlike the defendants in Northside Realty, the present defendants’ constitutional claims based on foreperson selection are ripe for decision. The record on the foreperson issue created in the Northside Realty case was adopted by all parties, who appeared on August 10, 1981, to update the record by the submission of additional exhibits and to offer limited testimony. We hereby make findings of fact and conclusions of law based on the record now before us.

I. EVIDENCE

(a) Composition by Race and Sex of Grand Juries, Forepersons and Deputy Forepersons.

From January 1970 to February 3, 1981, 47 different grand juries for the Northern District of Georgia were impaneled, each consisting of not more than 23 members. During this period, 48 foreperson and 47 deputy appointments were made. 2 The duty of appointing forepersons and deputies was rotated among 11 then sitting judges. 3 *470 Of the 48 forepersons selected, three were black. 4 Two white females were selected foreperson by Judge Freeman. Regarding deputies, there were three black females, two black males, and 14 white females. 5

All grand juries aggregated 1060 jurors, composed of 563 (53.1%) white males, 336 (31.7%) white females, 74 (7.0%) black females, and 58 (5.5%) black males. 6 As regards the composition by sex, 637 (60.1%) were males and 423 (40.0%) were females. As for race, 899 (84.8%) were white and 132 (12.5%) were black. 7

(b) Population Data.

Census data for 1980 indicates that the racial composition of the Northern District of Georgia is 78.4% white and 20.6% black. Because 1980 census data broken down by age was not yet available and because the foreperson selections at issue were made from 1970 to 1980, we deem it appropriate to utilize the 1970 data, adjusted by 1978 Georgia estimates and recognized under-count percentages, relied upon by James Michael O’Reilly, defendant’s expert, at the January hearing. Applying these formulas, the Northern District of Georgia’s jury age-eligible (18 to 69) 8 black population of 340,-464 represents 19.1% of the total age-eligible population. Since black forepersons represented only 6.1% of total foreperson selections, the absolute disparity is 13%. 9 Although O’Reilly’s testimony did not include statistical data concerning deputy fo *471 repersons, our analysis indicates that black forepersons and deputy forepersons represented 8.4% of total foreperson and deputy appointments (8 out of 95). Thus, if the positions of foreperson and deputy are considered of equal significance, the absolute disparity is reduced to 10.7%.

Females comprise 51.2% of the district age-eligible population. Since there were only two female forepersons, representing 4.1% of total foreperson selections, the absolute disparity regarding females is 47.1%. 10 Females were appointed as either foreperson or deputy foreperson a total of 19 of the 95 total foreperson and deputy selections. Therefore, a comparison of 20% female representation of total foreperson and deputy appointments with their proportion in the population results in an absolute disparity of 31.2%.

(c) Theoretical Evidence.

Dr. John McConahay, an expert in group dynamics, testified that since the grand jury foreperson is selected by a judge, who is perceived as a neutral person with authority and expertise in the law, the appointee would have more influence during deliberations than the average grand juror. McConahay, however, acknowledged that he had no actual knowledge of or experience with a federal grand jury, having never served as a grand juror, and thus did not know the nature or length of duty or the manner in which a grand jury transacts business. Professor Hans Zeisel, author of The American Jury, testified concerning his studies regarding the role of the foreperson in petit juries. Since no one has ever studied the deliberations of a grand jury, Zeisel was of the opinion that petit jury studies constituted the best information available. Zeisel’s studies indicate that a petit jury foreperson’s contribution during deliberations represented 25% of total contribution by petit jurors, and that the remaining 11 petit jurors contributed 75%. Furthermore, the foreperson’s initial feelings concerning a case coincided with the jury’s ultimate finding in more cases than did the initial feelings of other jurors. Although petit jurors normally select their own foreperson, Zeisel concluded that the influence of a foreperson would be increased if appointed by a judge. Zeisel agreed with McConahay that the leader of any group becomes more important as the size of the group increases.

Judge Robert L. Vining, Jr., testified that, based on his personal observations of 40 state grand juries while he was district attorney in the Georgia state courts, the foreperson occupies a “vital position”— “[otherwise you’ve got twenty-three people running off in twenty-three different directions.” Tr. 307. Judge Vining described desirable qualities in a foreperson as follows:

[H]e or she has to be a person who basically can operate, run a business, a board, so as to speak, of a business, with some degree of firmness, not be arbitrary. I think a foreman has to be a strong person in that it is — the grand jury is dealing with the government and, after all, the grand jury is the only thing that stands between a defendant and trial.

Tr. 306. The judge readily acknowledged that the state grand jury operates in several respects different from a federal grand jury. For example, in Georgia the state grand jury foreperson is selected by the grand jurors and does not ordinarily cast a vote in indictments.

(d) Judges’ Testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
522 F. Supp. 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-breland-gand-1981.