PER CURIAM:
Defendants appeal their convictions and the district judge’s denial of their post-trial motions, including a motion for a new trial because of alleged juror misconduct. This court has jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a) and 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
On March 15, 1996, a federal grand jury in the Middle District of Florida returned an 18-count indictment against defendants Emilio Ippolito (“Ippolito”), Susan Mokdad (“Mokdad”), Phillip Marsh (“Marsh”), Douglas Carpa (“Carpa”), Richard Brown (“Brown”), Charles Dunnigan (“Dunni-gan”), Jack Warren (“Warren”), and Laurent Moore (“Moore”), for violations of federal law, including attempts to obstruct state and federal court proceedings by threatening jurors. The district judge, on the Government’s motion and over defendants’ vigorous objection, empaneled an “innominate” jury,
and assigned each pro
spective juror an identification number. The trial lasted from May 28 until August 13, 1997. Brown was acquitted of all charges, Carpa was convicted of all charges, and the remaining defendants were found guilty of some counts and not guilty of others.
I.
As a threshold issue, we are concerned about the district judge’s investigation of charges of juror misconduct.
Our decision turns on few of the many facts adduced, proceedings conducted, and decisions rendered by the district judge throughout the long, difficult trial. Only those facts relevant to this decision will be stated below.
During
voir dire,
the district judge asked each prospective juror whether he or she had been “charged with a crime? And by that I mean something you understood might have resulted in being imprisoned if you were convicted.” 6/3/97 Transcript, at 147. Juror 505 responded, “I was stopped last year and charged with driving with a suspended driver’s license. It was an unpaid traffic ticket. It has since been resolved, no problem.”
Id.
at 148. The district judge stated, “All right,” and proceeded to the next juror.
Id.
at 148. In fact, during the entire trial, Juror 505 was: (1) on probation following a Florida felony arrest for driving with a suspended license; and (2) required to serve 60 days in jail on weekends.
See
3/12/98 Transcript of Proceedings before Circuit
Judge Douglas Baird. It is unclear from the record whether any portion of this sentence was actually served during the trial.
The district judge empaneled twelve petit jurors and six alternates; juror 505 was an alternate. At the end of evidence but before deliberation, the district judge excused a juror on a motion by the defense. Juror 505, as first alternate, became a petit juror. Juror 505 subsequently participated in deliberations and remained present during announcement of the verdicts on August 13, 1997.
On October 30, 1997, Robert Gaskin, Esq. (“Gaskin”), of Pinellas County, Florida, contacted Thomas Ostrander, Esq. (“Ostrander”), counsel for Ippolito. Gas-kin advised Ostrander that he had recently taken the sworn deposition of a party in a marriage dissolution action, and the deponent identified himself as a member of the petit jury that rendered verdicts in the Ippolito trial. Ostrander asked Gaskin not to provide him with the juror’s identifying information because of the innominate jury order.
See
11/4/97 letter from Ostrander to Judge Merryday, Docket # 776. Gas-kin stated that the deponent had admitted to: (1) being charged and convicted of numerous felonies; and (2) having been on probation before, during, and after his tenure as a juror in the Ippolito trial.
Ostrander communicated the information he received from Gaskin to the district judge.
See
11/4/97 letter from Ostrander to Judge Merryday, Docket # 776. The district judge asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) to investigate the facts surrounding Gaskin’s allegations,
see
6/9/98 Dist. Ct. Op. at 5, and to identify and investigate the juror and his criminal record.
The FBI assigned Agent Robert Coffin (“Coffin”) to investigate; Coffin deduced that the suspect was Juror 505. Coffin interviewed Juror 505, once in the presence of Deputy Marshal Billy Walker, and once in the presence of Assistant United States Attorneys (“AUSAs”) Ernest Pelu-so (the AUSA who prosecuted defendants) and Robert Monk. Coffin interviewed the Florida probation officer assigned to Juror 505 once alone, and once in the presence of AUSAs Peluso and Monk. Coffin’s interviews of Juror 505 and his probation officer were not in the presence of defense counsel or the district judge.
Defendants moved for a mistrial based on the allegations concerning Juror 505.
The district judge held hearings on Juror 505’s alleged misconduct on April 6 and 8, 1998 (“the hearings”).
Evidence was adduced that between 1988 and 1997, Juror 505 was charged with burglary, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, disorderly conduct, grand theft, and driving with a license suspended or revoked. Each charge was either dropped or received an “adjudication withheld,” a Florida procedure suspending a jail sentence and placing defendant directly on probation. In 1991, Juror 505 violated probation on the burglary charge, entered a guilty plea, but was still not convicted of a felony. In October, 1996, Juror 505 pled no con
test to driving with a license suspended or revoked; his prior traffic infractions upgraded the offense to a third degree felony. Adjudication was withheld, but Juror 505 nevertheless was sentenced to 60 days in custody and 18 months probation.
On March 12, 1998, Juror 505 had moved the Florida court to modify his sixty day jail sentence; Judge Douglas Baird originally stated that Juror 505 had to complete his jail sentence, but after learning of Juror 505’s service on the jury that convicted some defendants, Judge Baird waived the jail portion of his sentence.
See
4/7/98 Order of Honorable Douglas W. Baird.
Juror 505 was not called to testify at the hearings; the only witness heard was Coffin. Coffin testified to Juror 505’s criminal record as obtained through: (1) NCIC, the national crime tracking system; (2) interviews with Juror 505; and (3) interviews with Juror 505’s probation officer. The NCIC report was incomplete; Coffin was unable to answer difficult questions about Juror 505’s record. The District judge acknowledged the “ambiguity as to [Juror 505’s] degree of fault [in prior arrests].”
See
6/9/98 Dist. Ct. Op. at 15. But at various times during the hearings, the district judge expressed reluctance to order a new trial, presumably because of the length and complexity of the trial.
See, e.g.,
4/6/98 Hrg. Transer. at 65, 84; 4/8/98 Hrg. Transer. at 52.
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PER CURIAM:
Defendants appeal their convictions and the district judge’s denial of their post-trial motions, including a motion for a new trial because of alleged juror misconduct. This court has jurisdiction under 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a) and 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
On March 15, 1996, a federal grand jury in the Middle District of Florida returned an 18-count indictment against defendants Emilio Ippolito (“Ippolito”), Susan Mokdad (“Mokdad”), Phillip Marsh (“Marsh”), Douglas Carpa (“Carpa”), Richard Brown (“Brown”), Charles Dunnigan (“Dunni-gan”), Jack Warren (“Warren”), and Laurent Moore (“Moore”), for violations of federal law, including attempts to obstruct state and federal court proceedings by threatening jurors. The district judge, on the Government’s motion and over defendants’ vigorous objection, empaneled an “innominate” jury,
and assigned each pro
spective juror an identification number. The trial lasted from May 28 until August 13, 1997. Brown was acquitted of all charges, Carpa was convicted of all charges, and the remaining defendants were found guilty of some counts and not guilty of others.
I.
As a threshold issue, we are concerned about the district judge’s investigation of charges of juror misconduct.
Our decision turns on few of the many facts adduced, proceedings conducted, and decisions rendered by the district judge throughout the long, difficult trial. Only those facts relevant to this decision will be stated below.
During
voir dire,
the district judge asked each prospective juror whether he or she had been “charged with a crime? And by that I mean something you understood might have resulted in being imprisoned if you were convicted.” 6/3/97 Transcript, at 147. Juror 505 responded, “I was stopped last year and charged with driving with a suspended driver’s license. It was an unpaid traffic ticket. It has since been resolved, no problem.”
Id.
at 148. The district judge stated, “All right,” and proceeded to the next juror.
Id.
at 148. In fact, during the entire trial, Juror 505 was: (1) on probation following a Florida felony arrest for driving with a suspended license; and (2) required to serve 60 days in jail on weekends.
See
3/12/98 Transcript of Proceedings before Circuit
Judge Douglas Baird. It is unclear from the record whether any portion of this sentence was actually served during the trial.
The district judge empaneled twelve petit jurors and six alternates; juror 505 was an alternate. At the end of evidence but before deliberation, the district judge excused a juror on a motion by the defense. Juror 505, as first alternate, became a petit juror. Juror 505 subsequently participated in deliberations and remained present during announcement of the verdicts on August 13, 1997.
On October 30, 1997, Robert Gaskin, Esq. (“Gaskin”), of Pinellas County, Florida, contacted Thomas Ostrander, Esq. (“Ostrander”), counsel for Ippolito. Gas-kin advised Ostrander that he had recently taken the sworn deposition of a party in a marriage dissolution action, and the deponent identified himself as a member of the petit jury that rendered verdicts in the Ippolito trial. Ostrander asked Gaskin not to provide him with the juror’s identifying information because of the innominate jury order.
See
11/4/97 letter from Ostrander to Judge Merryday, Docket # 776. Gas-kin stated that the deponent had admitted to: (1) being charged and convicted of numerous felonies; and (2) having been on probation before, during, and after his tenure as a juror in the Ippolito trial.
Ostrander communicated the information he received from Gaskin to the district judge.
See
11/4/97 letter from Ostrander to Judge Merryday, Docket # 776. The district judge asked the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) to investigate the facts surrounding Gaskin’s allegations,
see
6/9/98 Dist. Ct. Op. at 5, and to identify and investigate the juror and his criminal record.
The FBI assigned Agent Robert Coffin (“Coffin”) to investigate; Coffin deduced that the suspect was Juror 505. Coffin interviewed Juror 505, once in the presence of Deputy Marshal Billy Walker, and once in the presence of Assistant United States Attorneys (“AUSAs”) Ernest Pelu-so (the AUSA who prosecuted defendants) and Robert Monk. Coffin interviewed the Florida probation officer assigned to Juror 505 once alone, and once in the presence of AUSAs Peluso and Monk. Coffin’s interviews of Juror 505 and his probation officer were not in the presence of defense counsel or the district judge.
Defendants moved for a mistrial based on the allegations concerning Juror 505.
The district judge held hearings on Juror 505’s alleged misconduct on April 6 and 8, 1998 (“the hearings”).
Evidence was adduced that between 1988 and 1997, Juror 505 was charged with burglary, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, disorderly conduct, grand theft, and driving with a license suspended or revoked. Each charge was either dropped or received an “adjudication withheld,” a Florida procedure suspending a jail sentence and placing defendant directly on probation. In 1991, Juror 505 violated probation on the burglary charge, entered a guilty plea, but was still not convicted of a felony. In October, 1996, Juror 505 pled no con
test to driving with a license suspended or revoked; his prior traffic infractions upgraded the offense to a third degree felony. Adjudication was withheld, but Juror 505 nevertheless was sentenced to 60 days in custody and 18 months probation.
On March 12, 1998, Juror 505 had moved the Florida court to modify his sixty day jail sentence; Judge Douglas Baird originally stated that Juror 505 had to complete his jail sentence, but after learning of Juror 505’s service on the jury that convicted some defendants, Judge Baird waived the jail portion of his sentence.
See
4/7/98 Order of Honorable Douglas W. Baird.
Juror 505 was not called to testify at the hearings; the only witness heard was Coffin. Coffin testified to Juror 505’s criminal record as obtained through: (1) NCIC, the national crime tracking system; (2) interviews with Juror 505; and (3) interviews with Juror 505’s probation officer. The NCIC report was incomplete; Coffin was unable to answer difficult questions about Juror 505’s record. The District judge acknowledged the “ambiguity as to [Juror 505’s] degree of fault [in prior arrests].”
See
6/9/98 Dist. Ct. Op. at 15. But at various times during the hearings, the district judge expressed reluctance to order a new trial, presumably because of the length and complexity of the trial.
See, e.g.,
4/6/98 Hrg. Transer. at 65, 84; 4/8/98 Hrg. Transer. at 52.
After the hearings, the district judge, denying defense motions for mistrial, concluded that there was no juror misconduct for lack of evidence that Juror 505 was dishonest or biased. The district judge found that Juror 505:(1) had adjudications withheld on several occasions and served several probationary terms, but had no federal or state felony convictions; (2) never had his civil rights suspended or terminated; (3) had no felony charges pending against him at the time of trial; and (4) satisfied the statutory qualification to sit as a juror under 28 U.S.C. § 1865.
The district judge reasoned that: (1) the mixed verdict was strong evidence that Juror 505 was not biased; (2) retrial would involve large expenditures of time and expense; and (3) Juror 505 did not actively elect to withhold or deflect his criminal record, and if he did, it was to minimize his embarrassment. The district judge implied that any error related to Juror 505 was harmless error. The district judge based his decision on Coffin’s hearsay testimony of Juror 505’s criminal record and motive.
In April, 1998, Juror 505’s identity was revealed by an unknown source; his picture was posted on the internet and his name printed in newspapers. The district judge requested an FBI investigation into the release of Juror 505’s identity because it violated court orders restricting the identification of jurors.
II.
Errors during
voir dire
can so affect a trial that they warrant a new trial. But “[a] litigant is entitled to a fair trial, but not a perfect one.”
McDonough Power Equip., Inc. v. Greenwood,
464 U.S. 548, 553, 104 S.Ct. 845, 78 L.Ed.2d 663 (1984). Courts should “ignore errors that do not affect the essential fairness of the trial.”
Id.; see also
28 U.S.C. § 2111 (harmless error statute).
Voir dire
examination serves to protect the right to a jury capable and willing to decide the case solely on the evidence before it.
See McDonough,
464 U.S. at 554, 104 S.Ct. 845. To invalidate the result of a long and burdensome trial because of a juror’s mistaken, though honest, response to a question, “is to insist on something closer to perfection than our
judicial system can be expected to give.”
Id.
at 555, 104 S.Ct. 845.
To obtain a new trial for juror misconduct during
voir dire,
a party must: 1) demonstrate that a juror failed to answer honestly a material question on
voir dire,
and then 2) show that a correct response would have provided a valid basis for a challenge for cause.
See McDonough Power Equip. v. Greenwood,
464 U.S. 548, 556, 104 S.Ct. 845, 78 L.Ed.2d 663 (1984).
McDonough
first “requires a determination of whether the juror’s answers were honest.”
BankAtlanbic v. Blythe Eastman Paine Webber, Inc.,
955 F.2d 1467, 1473 (11th Cir.1992). Then, there must be a showing of bias that would disqualify the juror.
See id.; United States v. Perkins,
748 F.2d 1519, 1532 (11th Cir.1984). Bias may be shown either by express admission or by proof of specific facts showing such a close connection to the circumstances at hand that bias must be presumed.
See BankAtlantic,
955 F.2d at 1473. A juror’s dishonesty is a strong indication
of
bias.
See Perkins,
748 F.2d at 1532. If a court determines there was actual bias, the juror’s inclusion in the petit jury is never harmless error.
See McDonough,
464 U.S. at 556, 104 S.Ct. 845.
In
BankAtlantic,
a civil action, we denied a motion for a new trial because a jury foreman’s private reading of a newspaper article about a party did not create a reasonable possibility of prejudice.
See BankAtlantic,
955 F.2d at 1472-73. In
Perkins,
a criminal action, we granted a motion for a new trial because a juror did not correctly answer
voir dire
questions concerning whether he knew the defendant and whether he had been involved in prior civil and criminal litigation.
Perkins,
748 F.2d at 1532. The juror in
Perkins
also told the jury during deliberations that he knew the defendant and/or had served on a committee with him.
Id.
at 1533.
Investigation of alleged juror misconduct “is committed
to the
discretion of the district court and is reviewed only for an abuse of that discretion.”
United States v. Prosperi,
201 F.3d 1335, 1340 (11th Cir.2000). A court enjoys “substantial discretion in choosing the investigative procedure to be used in checking for juror misconduct.”
United States v. Register,
182 F.3d 820, 840 (11th Cir.1999). However, the district judge erred in his supervision of the joint FBI-Prosecution private examination of Juror 505.
There seems now to be an insufficiently investigated possibility that Juror 505 was both dishonest and biased during
voir dire
and throughout the trial. The district judge had broad discretion to investigate Juror 505, but he never questioned the juror himself and did not establish a sufficient evidentiary record either to determine whether Juror 505 was honest and unprejudiced or to allow us to review the determination.
The conclusions regarding Juror 505 were based primarily on hearsay evidence by Agent Coffin; there remain significant, appeal-determinative issues of: 1) whether
juror 505 was influenced from the outset by the possibility of getting his sentence reduced so that his responses to the
voir dire
questions were deliberately deceptive (in fact, his sixty day custodial sentence was vacated because of his service on the jury); and 2) whether the Government’s— the same prosecutor who tried the underlying case — unsupervised
ex parte
participation in the FBI investigation influenced Juror 505 and/or Agent Coffin. Defendants may have faded to prove dishonesty and bias because they did not have the opportunity to participate (as did the prosecutors) in the investigation of Juror 505.
The Government argues that actual bias cannot be proved because prejudice could only be shown if Juror 505 held the Government to a lower standard of proof than the law requires; Juror 505 told Coffin that he held the Government to a greater burden of proof than the law requires.
The juror’s response tends to show bias by the juror because he disregarded court instructions.
On remand and after a proper investigation by the district court, including his own questioning of the juror in camera if necessary (and cross-examination of the juror by defense counsel unless the district court finds such an examination too risky and sets out specific reasons for the finding), the district judge must redetermine whether Juror 505 was ever convicted of or had a charge pending for a felony under 28 U.S.C. § 1865(b)(5), and whether Juror 505’s response to the court questioning could have been honestly mistaken or, even if technically accurate, was deliberately intended to deceive to permit him to serve on this jury.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED except the district court’s denial of the motion for a new trial based on juror misconduct is VACATED and the ease is REMANDED for further proceedings on that motion.