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Jack Roland
MURPHY
Jack Roland
Murphy or Murph the Surf (born 1938 in Los Angeles, California)
was a legendary surfer and convicted murderer who is most famous
for his role in the biggest jewel heist in American history at
the American Museum of Natural History.
Early years
He claims he
played with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra at age 15. In 1962
and 1963 he was a state surfing champ in Florida. In 1963, he
won the Hurricane National Surfing contest in Florida.
Robbery
He was
involved with a robbery on October 29, 1964, of the Star of
India along with several other precious gems, including the
Eagle Diamond and the de Long Ruby.
The thieves
had unlocked a bathroom window during museum hours at the
American Museum of Natural History, and climbed in that night.
They discovered that the sapphire was the only gem in the
collection protected by an alarm, and the battery for that alarm
was dead. The stones were valued at more than $400,000.
Jack Murphy
was arrested two days later with two accomplices, Alan Kuhn and
Roger Clark. They received a three-year sentence. The uninsured
Star of India was recovered in a locker in a Miami bus station.
Most of the other gems were also recovered, except the Eagle
Diamond. Richard Duncan Pearson was also convicted.
The heist was the subject of a 1975 movie,
directed by Marvin Chomsky, called Murph the Surf. The
movie starred Robert Conrad, Burt Young, and Don Stroud (as
Murphy).
Murder
In 1968 he was
convicted of first-degree murder of a California secretary, one
of two women whose bodies were found in Whiskey Creek near
Hollywood, Florida, in 1967. He also was convicted of trying to
rob a Miami Beach woman in 1968. He was sentenced to life in
prison in Florida.
Post Prison
When Bill Glass, Roger
Staubach and McCoy McLemore visited Florida State prison in
1974, as part of a Bill Glass Champions for Life weekend, Murphy
was impressed with the visitors, both world champion athletes
and local businessmen. At that time Murphy had an earliest
parole date of Nov. 2225, but that weekend changed his attitude
and he devoted his future time spent in prison to serving a
higher cause. His service in the chaplaincy program, leading
Bible studies and mentoring other men in prison led the Florida
Parole Board to release him on "parole with lifetime monitoring"
in 1986.
In 1986, Murphy began going back into prisons
and jails all over the U.S. as a platform guest with Bill Glass.
In 1990, he was hired on staff with Bill Glass Champions for Life.
Murphy has also been a featured speaker for Kairos, Coalition of
Prison Evangelists, Int'l Prison Ministries, Time for Freedom and
Good News Jail & Prison Ministry. After visiting over 1,200
prisons, and recognizing the incredible change apparent in this
man's life, the FL Parole Board terminated his "lifetime parole"
in 2000.
Murphy is now international director for
Champions for Life, visiting prisons, jails, and youth detention
facilities all over the world. Murphy authored a book of his
experience and testimony "Jewels for the Journey".
Wikipedia.org
Murph the Surf
In late October 1964, thieves stole 22 gems from New York City’s
Museum of Natural History. Three of the stones were so famous
they would be impossible to sell. Within 48 hours, aided by
confidential police sources, two men in New York and another two
in Miami were arrested. One of those men, Jack Murphy, was a
legendary surfer and beach boy. Later, he was to commit - apart
from murder - the biggest jewel heist in American history. Today
his moniker ‘Murph the Surf’ still haunts him, despite his
efforts of rehabilitation and becoming a Born Again Christian
and preacher.
Jack Roland Murphy was born in Los Angeles, California before
the family moved to Pennsylvania. He was the A1 student and the
boy every parent dreams of, showing an aptitude for sport and
ability in most subjects. A passionate surfer, he was named the
state’s top surfer in 1963, winning the National Hurricane
Surfing championship twice. More incredibly at 15 years of age
he was playing with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra.
Throughout his colourful career it is claimed that he has been a
concert violinist, tennis pro, movie stunt man, high-tower
circus diver, and less noble; a jewel thief and convicted
murderer, who was even the subject of a 1974 feature film,
‘Murph the Surf’, starring Robert Conrad.
His audacious crime of the stealing the Star of India, a 563.35
carat star sapphire, wasn’t something he benefited from. Two
days later he was arrested with his accomplices.
But the main question is what turned a high achieving young man
with accolades and women at his feet into a violent criminal? A
psychologist who examined him after an arrest in 1968 said “he’s
top notch at everything he does”
Highs & Kicks
One probable answer is that he realised he experienced a
vicarious thrill from danger and getting away with criminal
acts. The thrill of the chase and participating in a high
powered heist, no doubt gave him the kind of emotional high or
kick that he failed to get from other areas in his life. The
principle character who introduced him to a life of crime was
swimming instructor and ladies man, Allan Kuhn. The wealthy Kuhn
epitomised the glamorous gangster, with his yacht, 50-knot
speedboat and a Cadillac convertible.
Taking up the risky and dangerous world of stealing with Kuhn,
Murphy loved the getaway scenarios that felt like something
straight out of an action film. There was the thrill of escaping
the law by boat or car and this was part of a glamorous package
that included an affluent lifestyle made up of swanky parties,
upmarket apartments, even safe houses in Hawaii and yachts
around the Caribbean. But the crime that was to immortalise his
name in hall of infamy was to become known as the greatest jewel
heist of the 20th century.
The Crimes
The Star of India, one of the most precious jewels in the world,
was exhibited along with other valuable gems in what was known
as the J.P. Morgan Collection in New York’s Museum of Natural
History.
On the evening of October 29, 1964, Murphy and his cohorts
climbed through a bathroom window they had unlocked during
opening hours. The Star sapphire was the only gem in the
collection protected by an alarm. Luckily for them the battery
operating the alarm was dead. Murphy managed to steal stones,
including the sapphire worth around $400,000.
The high he must have experienced from such an audacious robbery
that involved no violence, was short lived when Murphy was
arrested along with his accomplices just two days later. The
Star of India was recovered in a Miami bus station locker. Most
of the other gems were also found.
The one thing that gave them away was the lavish parties they
had held at the Cambridge Hotel while planning the heist.
Murphy received 21 months in jail. When he came out it appeared
that his experiences had hardened him for he is quoted as saying
that when he came out of New York’s Rikers Island prison he
didn’t give a ‘damn’ about ‘anything or anyone’.
Murder
Relating to the next crimes committed by Murphy, that statement
certainly appeared prophetic.
1968 was to see a turning point in Murphy’s style and image as a
glamorous cat burglar. For he was to become involved in crimes
of violence that led to several deaths.
Murphy acted as look-out and getaway driver when he and two
partners broke into the huge mansion of Olive Wofford, a Miami
Beach socialite. Wofford later told police, the thieves held a
pistol to her and also threatened to pour boiling water over her
eight year-old niece if she didn't co-operate and open the safe.
Murphy was later tracked down by the police which involved a
high-powered chase where he drove his vehicle through a pair of
French doors. When apprehended and found to be swathed in
bandages Murphy quipped "I cut myself shaving."
But worse to come was the discovery that two Californian
secretaries had died at his hands in 1967 despite Murphy denying
he had anything to do with the killings. Later to be known as
the Whiskey Creek murders, the two women had been shot,
bludgeoned to death and then dumped in a creek near Hollywood,
Florida.
Concrete weights had been tied to their necks to sink them. The
victims had allegedly been brutally killed in a dispute over
nearly half a million dollars worth of securities stolen from a
Los Angeles brokerage. Murphy was convicted of first-degree
murder and sentenced to life in prison.
Despite denying he was involved in the Whiskey Creek murders,
Murphy was convicted of killing Terry Rae Frank, 24, in 1969 and
sentenced to life in prison. In 1970, he received a second life
sentence, plus 20 years, for conspiracy and assault to commit
robbery against Olive Wofford.
Due to becoming a model prisoner, a Christian and showing
remorse for his past Murphy was paroled from the Florida State
Prison in 1986.
Rehabilitation
After 19 years, Murphy was released from Florida State Prison in
2000, mainly because of his exemplary behaviour. During his time
in prison he had become religious and taken on a role assisting
the prison's chaplain and counselling young offenders. The
Florida Parole Board saw fit to terminate his lifetime parole.
Today Murphy acts as an Evangelist style preacher visiting the
prisons as a ‘messenger of God’ with the aim of helping
rehabilitate other felons through religion. He says of his
villainous and murderous past
“To this day, that era pains me. I'm not at all pleased with my
past, or the terrible mistakes that I did, the hurt that I
caused people.
I am ashamed and embarrassed by all of that."
Ex-thief 'Murph the Surf' to retell his story
in film
Now living in Crystal River and leading a prison ministry, Jack
Murphy became a legend for stealing jewels.
By Terri D. Reeves - St. Petersburg Times
TARPON SPRINGS - It's been nearly 40 years since Jack Roland
Murphy made national headlines.
Now "Murph the Surf" is 66, with white hair and
tanned, textured skin. He is a handsome man: 6 feet tall with
chiseled features and ocean-blue eyes.
Smart, too. Psychologists have labeled him a
genius.
He speaks with confidence, panache and hard-earned
wisdom.
He was a national surfing champion, a concert
violinist, a tennis pro, a movie stunt man.
He was also a notorious jewel thief - the man
who stole the Star of India sapphire - and a convicted murderer.
Now he is a born-again Christian and director
of an international prison ministry.
Last week, the man who seems to have several
lifetimes' worth of experience came to Tarpon Springs to tell his
story of crime, punishment and redemption to a documentary film
crew.
"If you're not doing God's business, you are
just doing time," he said.
Producers from Interlock Media, an independent
production company based in Cambridge, Ma., are shooting a
documentary called Faith in the Big House. In it, they plan to
explore questions about spiritual transformations within the
prison population. Murphy is their star interview.
On Thursday, their location of choice was a
cramped second-story office at the Landing at Tarpon Springs, a
marina and office complex on the north bank of the Anclote River.
It was chosen because Murphy loves the ambience of Tarpon Springs
and the window provided a view of the Sponge Docks.
Inside the sweltering office, the windows were
closed and the air conditioner was turned off because the
sensitive sound equipment would pick up every pin drop. When
workers outside had to refill a 4,000-gallon fuel tank, the crew
stopped until the noise subsided.
All the while, Murphy sat patiently under a hot
light, his back to the sun, his ears and face coated with burnt
orange makeup. He looked a bit like a baking sweet potato.
"You are spritzing," said director Jonathan
Schwartz, who signaled a production assistant to wipe his face.
Fifteen oppressively hot minutes later, the
fuel tank was filled and Murphy launched into his spiel about his
organization, the Bill Glass Champions for Life. He talked about
his 12,000 volunteers - counselors, entertainers, sports
superstars, and successful ex-cons - who will visit 400 prisons
throughout the United States and the world this year. On Saturday,
he and 100 volunteers took the Day of Champions ministry to the
Pinellas County Jail for a half-day program.
The razzle-dazzle shows are motivational and
spiritual in nature.
Murphy says prisoners are looking for an answer
and Jesus Christ is it.
"Our country was founded on a book about a man
who was executed on death row," he said.
Murphy was not always religious. As a young man
in the late 1950s and early 1960s, he worshiped the Miami sunshine,
beaches and pretty girls.
He loved watching movies, especially ones about
clever crooks. His movie idol was Cary Grant and his favorite
movie was To Catch a Thief.
"But movies don't show the aftermath. They
don't show prisons and how horrible they are," he said.
Murphy was talented in many areas. A violin
prodigy, he played with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra at age
15. In 1962 and 1963, he was a state surfing champ. In 1963, he
won the Hurricane National Surfing contest.
He became a tennis pro, movie stunt man, and
then started his own surfboard company and became known as Murph
the Surf.
Murphy was riding high on the wave of life.
Then he began having wipeouts.
He lost his business and his marriage and fell
in love with booze.
He got involved with a wild crowd and before he
knew it, he was involved in a robbery.
"It didn't hurt anyone and insurance would
cover it," he told himself.
Murphy found he loved the adrenaline rush of
the getaways: by boat, car or swimming for his life in shark-infested
waters.
And he loved the lifestyle: a home in Hawaii, a
penthouse in New York, and a safe house in Santa Monica, Calif.,
for cooling off after the jobs.
Murphy was writing his own movie script, but he
wasn't planning on the surprise twist.
In 1964, Murphy and two partners pulled off
what has been called the largest jewelry heist in national history.
They broke into the American Museum of Natural History in New York
and stole the J.P. Morgan Collection of precious gems.
Their haul included the world's largest
sapphire, the Star of India, a 563-carat gem about the size of a
handball. They also snagged the 14-carat Eagle Diamond; the
Midnight Sapphire, the largest black sapphire in the world; and 26
other priceless gems.
Murphy was caught and spent two years in New
York prisons. The gems eventually were recovered from a bus
station locker in Miami.
In 1968, he was back in the slammer in Florida.
He was convicted of first-degree murder of a California secretary,
one of two young women whose bodies were found in Whiskey Creek
near Hollywood, Fla., in 1967. He also was convicted of trying to
rob a Miami Beach socialite in 1968.
He was sentenced to life in prison and spent
the next 19 years in Florida prisons, where he learned to paint
seascapes and lighthouses.
He said he became a born-again Christian at the
Florida State Prison in 1971.
"I didn't take it too seriously then," he said.
"It just seemed like the politically correct thing to do."
In 1974, he met Bill Glass, a pro football
player who brought his prison ministry to the prison. Over the
next few years, Murphy and Glass established a rapport.
"Suddenly the pieces of the puzzle came
together. I started to think differently. I began to really
understand Christianity and how it could affect my life in a
positive way," he said.
When he was paroled in 1986, he became a
volunteer for a number of ministries. One was the Bill Glass
Champions for Life.
"They asked me to come on staff to help with
banquets, youth work and prison counseling," he said.
The ministry grew and so has his role. He is
now the international director and spends his days organizing
events, raising funds, and ministering to prisoners.
Murphy wants people to know that there is "an
army of men and women who are coming out of prisons who are no
longer criminals because God has raised them up."
The Interlock Media documentary will not be the
first time his life has been put on film. He's been featured in
documentaries before. In the mid-1970s, Hollywood released a
feature film titled Murph the Surf starring Robert Conrad and
Donna Mills. Murphy says it's inaccurate and thinks they ruined it
by trying to turn it into a comedy.
He has been married for 15 years to a woman he
met during the making of a documentary while he was in prison.
They live in Crystal River. Between them, they have three sons and
six grandchildren. He has written a book, Jewels for the Journey,
in which he talks about his faith.
And he goes back to prison - not because he
likes it, but because his faith demands it.
"I hate going into prisons," he said. "They are
the devil's junk pile. But I do it because people visited me and
it meant a lot. I'm not doing anything different. It's just my
turn. Jesus said, "You visited me when I was in prison,' so it is
a command of God to go to prisons and anywhere people are down and
out."
Jewel Thief Turned Born-Again Grandpa Loving
Life
By Todd Lewan - Associated Press
Sunday, February 26, 2006
CRYSTAL RIVER, Fla. He taps the table. He rubs
his watch. He stirs his iced tea. He smooths his marlin-patterned
boat shirt. When he's not talking, his eyes dart from his cell
phone, to the lacquered fish on the walls of the waterfront
restaurant, to the boats.
No, Jack Murphy — the legendary surfer and
beach boy who scored the grandest jewel heist in American history
41 years ago — isn't one to sit still long.
"I can't sit around on a cruise ship, or sit
around in a lounge," he says. "I'm always, always, fiddling with
something."
He has been a concert violinist, national
surfing champion, tennis pro, movie stunt man, high-tower circus
diver, business owner, cat burglar, painter, author, convicted
murderer and subject of a 1974 feature film, "Murph the Surf,"
starring Robert Conrad.
"In fact, he's top notch at everything he does,"
wrote a psychologist who examined him after an arrest in 1968.
Murphy shrugs.
"I've always been very, very assertive." He
digs his fork into some Key lime pie. "I've got to have projects."
Murphy is clearly focused on his present
occupation — messenger of God. He visits the world's most violent
prisons to spread the Gospel among the baddest criminals.
The man who once sparked one of the biggest
riots at Florida State Prison is, at the age of 68, international
director (and oldest staffer) of Champions for Life, a prison
ministry founded 35 years ago by the former Cleveland Browns
football star Bill Glass.
The job takes Murphy into more than 200 prisons
a year. He preaches, counsels inmates, fundraises and organizes
events from Puerto Rico to England, from Barbados to South America.
This year, he's visiting prisons in Brazil and
Russia. More than 800,000 copies of his book, "Jewels for the
Journey," have been distributed in prisons across Russia and
India.
A Murph-organized event is an extravaganza. He
brings in major league athletes, motorcycle clubs, ventriloquists,
high-wire performers, country, soul and rock singers, wrestling,
karate and boxing champions and successful ex-cons. ("We've also
got a skydiver who has parachuted into 160 prisons," he notes, "and
Dondi, the only 'born again' elephant in the world.")
Of course, it's Murphy the prisoners want to
see. And he usually gives them a good show.
He bounds onto the stage, snaps up a microphone,
blesses his audience and rattles off tales of his prison
experiences, of his most famous scams and heists. He sprinkles his
patter with quotations from Scripture and stock lines like "If
you're not doing God's business, you're just doing time."
Education and employment aren't enough to
rehabilitate a criminal, he says. "If you don't deal with a
person's heart, with their soul ... all you're doing is passing
out Band-Aids." He says he recently preached at a penitentiary in
Fort Worth, Texas. "And in the audience, serving time, were 22
attorneys, six judges and a congressman. I rest my case."
His own change of heart occurred in 1974, the
day Glass and his troupe of NFL stars, including Hall-of-Famer
Roger Staubach, spoke to the inmates at the Florida penitentiary
where Murphy was serving two life sentences.
As he remembers it, the athletes talked about
the important role God played "in a real man's life," and, for the
first time, he considered the possibilities of faith.
There was no magic moment; his transformation,
he says, is "sort of a lifelong process."
In time, he became a model prisoner and
jailhouse artist, painting seascapes and lighthouses, counseling
troubled youths, working for the prison's chaplain.
After 19 years, Murphy was released. In 2000,
because of his exemplary behavior and ministry, the Florida Parole
Board voted unanimously to terminate his lifetime parole.
Still, to crime buffs and the masses, he
remains and perhaps always will be Murph the Surf, the hypercool
master of the waves who, along with two sidekicks, pulled off what
has been called the largest, most audacious jewel heist of the
20th century.
On the night of Oct. 29, 1964, they broke into
New York's American Museum of Natural History and stole the J.P.
Morgan Collection — including the Eagle diamond, the Midnight
sapphire, the DeLong ruby and the world's biggest sapphire, the
Star of India, a 563-carat gem about the size of a racquetball.
Within 48 hours, Murphy and his cohorts were in
police custody — thanks in part to a bellhop at the Cambridge
Hotel, where the three had been planning the break-in and throwing
lavish, all-night parties for weeks. The jewels were recovered
from a locker at a Miami bus station, except for nine diamonds
that had already been fenced.
"I was supposed to be on my way to Hawaii to
surf," Murphy told a reporter for The New York Times. "But this
inconvenience has fouled the whole thing up."
He copped a plea, and 21 months later, Murphy
left the jail at Riker's Island behind — though not the criminal
mind-set. "When I came out of prison in New York," he says, "I
didn't give a damn about anybody or anything."
In 1968, Murphy was the driver and lookout man
when three of his partners entered the 19-room mansion of Olive
Wofford, a Miami Beach socialite. At one point, she later told
police, they held a pistol to her and threatened to pour boiling
water on her 8-year-old niece if she didn't open the safe.
A swarm of police tracked him down. As they
closed in, he dove, headfirst, through a pair of French doors on
the second floor. (At the arraignment the next day, Murphy was
asked why his face was swathed in bandages. "I cut myself shaving,"
he said.)
That year, Murphy was charged with first-degree
murder in the "Whiskey Creek murders," the 1967 case of two
California secretaries who were found shot, bludgeoned and dumped
in a creek north of Miami, concrete weights lashed to their necks.
Prosecutors said the women were killed in a dispute over $488,000
worth of securities stolen from a Los Angeles brokerage.
Murphy denied it. Nevertheless, in 1969, he was
convicted of killing Terry Rae Frank, 24, and sentenced to life in
prison. In 1970, he received a second life sentence, plus 20 years,
for conspiracy and assault to commit robbery against Wofford.
To this day, that era pains him.
"I'm not at all pleased with my past, or the
terrible mistakes that I did, the hurt that I caused people." His
strong voice loses volume. "I am ashamed and embarrassed by all of
that."
How did a man who was offered a tennis
scholarship to college — who was invited to play violin with the
Pittsburgh Symphony at age 17 — become a legendary criminal?
Jack Roland Murphy was born in Los Angeles, the
son of an electrical lineman, and grew up in Carlsbad, Calif. The
family moved to Pennsylvania when Murphy was a senior in high
school, but he quickly traded the harsh winters for sunny south
Florida, and returned to his passion, surfing.
Twice he was named Florida's top surfer, and in
1963, won the National Hurricane Surfing championship. (He was
inducted into the Surf Legends Hall of Fame in 1996.)
But he fell in with Allan Kuhn, a diver,
swimming instructor and ladies' man with a yacht, 50-knot
speedboat and Cadillac convertible. Together, they took up
stealing.
What hooked Murphy were the getaways; there was
a thrill to escaping the law by boat, car, or by swimming through
miles of shark-infested waters. And he loved the lifestyle — the
safehouses in Hawaii, the parties in New York, the celebrations on
yachts around the Caribbean.
In early October of 1964, the duo stepped into
Kuhn's convertible and drove from Miami to the Upper West Side of
Manhattan, and their rendezvous with larcenous history.
Four decades later, Murphy has lost the old
swagger. In his twilight years, he has a bit of a spread (too much
calamari, he says), his forehead is freckled with age and sun
spots, and his hair, once a sweep of sun-bleached gold, is now
white and receding at the temples. He no longer poses for pictures
in his trademark sunglasses.
Once an epic womanizer, Murphy has been married
18 years to a member of a film crew that came to his prison to do
a documentary. Between them, they have three sons and seven
grandchildren. "My wife and I have been home-schooling three of
our grandchildren, ages 4, 6 and 8, for the past 14 months," he
says. "Now, THAT'S a challenge."
He skis in Colorado, sails with family down to
Key West, and surfs off Cocoa Beach, Puerto Rico, Hawaii and
California. Murphy keeps four clear, "classic" boards at the ready,
and paddles out when "the waves are nice and little and it's not
an ordeal."
But his priorities are elsewhere: "Mankind
wasn't created to build Superdomes and highways and get a lot of
money. Your purpose is to represent God."
Sometimes, Murphy leafs through his collection
of writings on America's legendary gangsters and criminals. He
pauses over one that features his face on the cover.
The book lumps Murphy in with Jesse James, Al
Capone, Thomas Blood. This does not faze him.
"Every single one of those guys died in prison,
or died some tragic, tragic death," Murphy says. "Very, very few
of the historical characters of the underworld xpeople. They
didn't learn from their mistakes."
495 F.2d 553
JackRolandMurphy,
Petitioner-appellant, v.
State of Florida, Respondent-appellee
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
June 10, 1974, Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Denied July 12, 1974
Before GEWIN, THORNBERRY and SIMPSON, Circuit Judges.
SIMPSON, Circuit Judges:
The lower court,
by a reported opinion, Murphy v. State of
Florida, S.D.Fla.1973, 363 F.Supp. 1224, denied appellant's
petition for habeas corpus relief from two state sentences
received in a single trial, to life imprisonment for armed robbery
and consecutively to twenty years imprisonment for assault with
intent to commit robbery. We affirm.
The attack upon the state convictions both in the trial court and
here is based primarily upon a claim of denial of Fourteenth
Amendment due process because of extensive pre-trial newspaper
publicity regarding Murphy, known as 'Murph
the Surf',1
and resultant prejudice to his Sixth Amendment right to a trial
before an impartial jury. Inasmuch as the background facts are
fully set forth in the lower court's opinion,2
a brief outline of them will suffice here.
The issues here
as below are (1) whether the Florida state trial court erred in
denying appellant a change of venue in the light of the pre-trial
publicity; (2) whether that court erred in failing to dismiss for
cause those trial jurors who knew Murphy
was a convicted felon; and (3) whether that court erred in
refusing to bifurcate the trial on the issues of guilt and sanity.
Petitioner was
arrested with three other persons in January 1968 as they fled the
scene in Dade County, Florida of the robbery of Mrs. Olive Wofford,
a wealthy resident of Miami Beach. In May, 1968 before his trial
for the Wofford robbery, the petitioner was arrested and indicted
for the double murder in an adjoining Florida county, Broward, of
two young women, Terry Rae Kent Frank and Annalie Mohn. These
killings became notorious in the press as the 'Whiskey Creek
Murders.'
Pre-trial
proceedings in the Wofford robbery case involved the trial judge's
controversial ruling as to the petitioner's competency to stand
trial. Extensive newspaper coverage again occurred. The robbery
charges in the Wofford case were nolle prossed to permit the
Broward County trial for the Whiskey Creek Murders to proceed. In
August 1968, prior to that murder trial, Murphy
and three others were indicted by a federal grand jury for
conspiring to transport stolen securities in interstate commerce,
charges related to the Whiskey Creek case and so played up in the
press. Murphy was found guilty on March
1, 1969, of one of the Whiskey Creek murders, that of Terry Rae
Kent Frank. Again, the trial and its result were extensively
publicized by the news media.
Thereafter on August 25, 1969, the state prosecutor refiled the
Wofford robbery case. In December of the same year,
Murphy pled guilty to one count of the
federal indictment.3
During the early July 1970 pre-trial proceedings in the Wofford
case, Murphy moved for change of venue on
the basis of prejudicial pre-trial publicity, including the
publicity attendant upon the earlier hearing in the Wofford
robbery case, the Star of India theft, the Whiskey Creek Murders,
and the federal conspiracy charges. The state trial judge duferred
ruling on this motion pending voir dire examination of the jury
panel. Voir dire commenced on July 27 and was completed on August
10, 1970. Of 78 veniremen questioned, 12 were excused peremptorily
by the petitioner, and 8 by the state, 27 were excused for medical
or economic reasons and 3 were excused for miscellaneous reasons.
20 were excused because they stated that they had formed an
opinion as to petitioner's guilt and could not give him a fair
trial. 8 jurors were selected to serve at the trial, 6 regular and
2 alternate.
Of the 8 selected,
5 had read or heard about the facts surrounding the Wofford
robbery through the media, from discussions with friends or
through discussions with other prospective jurors. Each of the
eight knew that Murphy had previously
been convicted either in the Star of India theft or the Whiskey
Creek Murders, but each assured the court that he would reach a
verdict based solely on evidence intorduced at the trial. The
court denied the motion for change of venue and the trial
proceeded. Murphy's plea of insanity was
rejected and he was convicted and sentenced, as noted supra, to
life imprisonment and to a term of twenty years consecutive
thereto.
The court below
carefully weighed the claim of denial of due process on the basis
of prejudicial pre-trial publicity, accepting his 'duty to make an
independent evaluation of the circumstances', Sheppard v. Maxwell,
1966, 384 U.S. 333, 86 S.Ct. 1507, 16 L.Ed.2d 600, but imposing
upon the petitioner the burden of showing that his conviction was
a result of 'essential unfairness . . . not as a matter of
speculation but as a demonstrable reality', Adams v. United States
ex rel. McCann, 1942, 317 U.S. 269, 281, 63 S.Ct. 236, 242, 87
L.Ed. 268. The district court was 'sensitive to the delicate
balance that must be struck as a result of the pervasiveness of
modern communications and the need to insure a fair trial for the
accused', 363 F.Supp. at 1226, adopting the approach set forth in
United States v. Agueci, 2 Cir. 1962, 310 F.2d 817, cert. denied,
1963, 372 U.S. 959, 83 S.Ct. 1016, 10 L.Ed.2d 12; Irvin v. Dowd,
1961, 366 U.S. 717, 722-723, 81 S.Ct. 1639, 1642, 6 L.Ed.2d 751,
and Reynolds v. United States, 1878, 98 U.S. 145, 156-157, 25 L.Ed.
244. The district judge found the presence of some objective
criteria, Beck v. Washington, 1962, 369 U.S. 541, 82 S.Ct. 955, 8
L.Ed.2d 98, in the nature and the time span of the pre-trial
publicity. We are in agreement with his determination that since
the newspaper articles were largely factual rather than
inflammatory, and since the dates of the news clippings and edited
television news releases were almost entirely between December 15,
1967 and January 24, 1969 (only five articles being presented to
the court bearing dates of the period of the jury selection and
only one of those being a front-page article) the passage of time
is a crucial factor in this case. We find no record basis upon
which to disturb his finding that 'each of the five jurors who had
some knowledge of the facts of the Wofford robbery possessed only
a vague recollection of the facts.' 363 F.Supp. at 1229.
We agree with the
district court that the failure to grant the motion for change of
venue was not a denial of due process.
In this
connection the petitioner urges that the language used by Judge
Eaton (quoted Note 3, supra) in granting a continuance in the
federal conspiracy trial shows that a change of venue was mandated
in the Wofford robbery trial in state court. This is a new
contention, not relied upon before the district court. These
remarks were as Judge Eaton stated, not based on the question of
prejudice, but entirely on his own estimate of the practicalities
of the situation and the conservation of his own judicial time.
Made as it was sixteen months prior to the state court trial of
the Wofford robbery case, and addressed to entirely different
considerations, his statement is irrelevant in the context of this
habeas corpus petition. We find petitioner's argument in this
respect to be without substance.
The second issue, whether each juror who possessed knowledge of
Murphy's previous felony convictions,
should have been excluded for cause is, as stated by the court
below, more troublesome, but we affirm his rejection of this
ground of attack by his excellent analysis at pages 1229-1230, 363
F.Supp. As pointed out there, Marshall v. United States, 1959, 360
U.S. 310, 79 S.Ct. 1171, 3 L.Ed.2d 1250, will not support issuance
of the writ on this ground, since as the Supreme Court was at
pains to point out, 360 U.S. at 313, 29 S.Ct. at 1171, its action
was taken in that direct criminal appeal pursuant only to its
inherent supervisory powers and not in terms of due process
standards. We think the district court correctly appraised the
situation in its refusal on grounds of federalism to grant the
writ on this ground of the petition.4
The district court's holding in this respect is well sommarized in
the following language:
'Although the
situation in Marshall is factually similar to the instant case,
the rationale of that opinion militates against Petitioner's
position. This Court, then, finds that a trial by jurors, each of
whom has obtained knowledge of a defendant's past felony
convictions through pre-trial publicity does not, in light of the
Supreme Court's refusal to so find, rise to Constitutional
proportions when each juror has satisfied the impartiality
requirements set forth in Irvin v. Dowd, supra. The Court
recognizes that the distinction between acts or occurrences which
warrant the exercise of federal supervisory powers and those which
reflect a denial of due process is often a nebulous one.
Nevertheless, the dictates of federalism compel this Court to
abide by that distinction whenever it exists. Petitioner's claim
regarding the effects of pre-trial publicity must fall.' 363
F.Supp. at 1230.
Finally, we agree
with the holding below that the final ground of attack, the
refusal of the state trial court to grant a bifurcated trial on
the issues of guilt and sanity, does not rise to constitutional
dimensions. Due process does not require a separate trial and the
states and their courts are free to determine whether such issues
should be tried separately or together. United States v. Huff, 5
Cir. 1969, 409 F.2d 1225, cert. denied, 1969, 396 U.S. 857, 90
S.Ct. 123, 24 L.Ed.2d 108.
Murphy had received
nationwide press attention in 1964 for his role in the theft of
the 'Star of India' sapphire from the New York Museum of Natural
History. The public media's use of the nickname 'Murph the Surf'
dated from that time
A statement made by the presiding judge, U.S.
District Judge Eaton, in the course of these proceedings did not
occur shortly before the Wofford robbery trial in the state court,
as stated by appellant's brief. The record shows that Judge
Eaton's statement was made at a March 6, 1969 hearing, not at a
1970 hearing, as appellant's brief seems to indicate. At that
hearing Judge Eaton granted a continuance of the case before him,
No. 68-360, rather than rule on a motion for change of venue. His
ruling was based on expediency:
'I am forgetting the question of prejudice and
being very practical about it . . . I think if we tried to do that
next week, that we would spend a week on voir dire and never
conceivably get a jury. Speaking of the time in Court, I have five
other criminal cases I could be trying while we are asking these
folks if they know anything about Murph the Surf, because I am
telling you, they do. People in this County can tell you who
Murphy is, who would not have the
slightest idea who Earl Faircloth is, and I think that is a fair
statement. I am not talking about any prejudicial newspaper
coverage at all. It may be that because Mr.
Murphy has simply sort of, somehow or another, become
pretty good publicity; but the point is, considering for a moment
every count in every trial which was ever had was entirely fair,
this man is simply too widely known, and so is Griffith and Kuhn,
to some degree.'
As noted in the text, Murphy
pled guilty to one count of this indictment in 1969. Judge Eaton
thereafter granted a change of venue to Pensacola in the Northern
District of Florida to the remaining defendants under that
indictment. Their case was tried and disposed of by him in
Pensacola in April 1970.
We are aware of the view announced in United
States ex rel. Doggett, 3 Cir. 1973, 472 F.2d 229, 237-239, that
Irvin v. Dowd, supra, and Sheppard v. Maxwell, supra, broaden the
Marshall holding so as now to require that its rule be applied to
state trials. While the question arose in a prejudicial publicity-change
of venue setting in Doggett, we do not seriously doubt that the
Third Circuit would apply its holding equally in a situation
involving, as presently under discussion, denials of challenges
for cause based on a juror's knowledge of prior convictions. With
deference, we disagree with our sister Circuit's conclusion and
decline here to be guided by Doggett
421 U.S. 794
Jack Roland MURPHY, Petitioner, v.
State of FLORIDA.
44 L.Ed.2d 589
United States Supreme Court
June 16, 1975
Syllabus
Petitioner, who was convicted in
state court of robbery contends in this habeas corpus proceeding
that he was denied a fair trial because jurors had learned from
news accounts of prior felony convictions or certain facts about
the robbery charge. In the course of jury selection 78 members of
the panel were questioned, 70 being excused (30 for personal
reasons, 20 peremptorily, and 20 by the court as having prejudged
petitioner), and eight being selected (including two alternates).
The District Court and the Court of Appeals denied relief. Held:
1. Juror exposure to information
about a state defendant's prior convictions or to news accounts of
the crime with which he is charged to not alone presumptively
deprive the defendant of due process. Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717,
81 S.Ct. 1639, 6 L.Ed.2d 751; Rideau v. Louisiana, 373 U.S. 723,
83 S.Ct. 1417, 10 L.Ed.2d 663; Estes v. Texas, 381 U.S. 532, 85
S.Ct. 1628, 14 L.Ed.2d 543; Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333, 86
S.Ct. 1507, 16 L.Ed.2d 600, distinguished. Pp. 797-799.
2. The voir dire in this case
indicates no such juror hostility to petitioner as to suggest a
partiality that could not be laid aside. Though some jurors
vaguely recalled the robbery and each had some knowledge of
petitioner's past crimes, none betrayed any belief in the
relevance to the roberry case of petitioner's past, and there was
no indication from the circumstances surrounding petitioner's
trial or from the number of the panel excused for prejudgment of
petitioner, of inflamed community sentiment to counter the indicia
of impartiality disclosed by the voir dire transcript. Thus, in
the totality of the circumstances, petitioner failed to show
inherent prejudice in the trial setting or actual prejudice from
the jury-selection process. Pp. 799-803.
5 Cir., 495 F.2d 553, affirmed.
Harvey S. Swickle, Miami Beach, Fla., for
petitioner.
William L. Rogers, Miami, Fla., for respondent,
pro hac vice, by special leave of Court.
Mr. Justice MARSHALL delivered the opinion of
the Court.
The question presented by this case is whether the petitioner was
denied a fair trial because members of the jury had learned from
news accounts about a prior felony conviction or certain facts
about the crime with which he was charged. Under the circumstances
of this case, we find that petitioner has not been denied due
process, and we therefore affirm the judgment below.
I
*
Petitioner was convicted in the Dade County, Fla., Criminal Court
in 1970 of breaking and entering a home, while armed, with intent
to commit robbery and of assault with intent to commit robbery.
The charges stemmed from the January 1968 robbery of a Miami Beach
home and petitioner's apprehension, with three others, while
fleeing from the scene.
The robbery and petitioner's arrest received extensive press
coverage because petitioner had been much in the news before. He
had first made himself notorious for his part in the 1964 theft of
the Star of India sapphire from a museum in New York. His
flamboyant lifestyle made him a continuing subject of press
interest; he was generally referred to—at least in the media—as 'Murph
the Surf.'
Before the date set for petitioner's trial on the instant charges,
he was indicted on two counts of murder in Broward County, Fla.
Thereafter the Dade County court declared petitioner mentally
incompetent to stand trial; he was committed to a hospital and the
prosecutor nolle prossed the robbery indictment. In August 1968 he
was indicted by a federal grand jury for conspiring to transport
stolen securities in interstate commerce. After petitioner was
adjudged competent for trial, he was convicted on one count of
murder in Broward County (March 1969) and pleaded guilty to one
count of the federal indictment involving stolen securities (December
1969). The indictment for robbery was refiled in August 1969 and
came to trial one year later.
The events of 1968 and 1969 drew extensive press coverage. Each
new case against petitioner was considered newsworthy, not only in
Dade County but elsewhere as well.1
The record in this case contains scores of articles reporting on
petitioner's trials and tribulations during this period; many
purportedly relate statements that petitioner or his attorney made
to reporters.
Jury selection in the present case began in August 1970. Seventy-eight
jurors were questioned. Of these, 30 were excused for
miscellaneous personal reasons; 20 were excused peremptorily by
the defense or prosecution; 20 were excused by the court as having
prejudged petitioner; and the remaining eight served as the jury
and two alternates. Petitioner's motions to dismiss the chosen
jurors, on the ground that they were aware that he had previously
been convicted of either the 1964 Star of India theft or the
Broward County murder, were denied, as was his renewed motion for
a change of venue based on allegedly prejudicial pretrial
publicity.
At
trial, petitioner did not testify or put in any evidence;
assertedly in protest of the selected jury, he did not
cross-examine any of the State's witnesses. He was convicted on
both counts, and after an unsuccessful appeal he sought habeas
corpus relief in the District Court for the Southern District of
Florida.
The District Court denied petitioner relief, D.C.Fla., 363 F.Supp.
1224 (1973), and the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
affirmed. 495 F.2d 553 (1974). We granted certiorari, 419 U.S.
1088, 95 S.Ct. 677, 42 L.Ed.2d 680 (1974), in order to resolve the
apparent conflict between the decision below and that of the Third
Circuit in United States ex rel. Doggett v. Yeager, 472 F.2d 229
(1973), over the applicability of Marshall v. United States, 360
U.S. 310, 79 S.Ct. 1171, 3 L.Ed.2d 1250 (1959), to state criminal
proceedings.
II
The defendant in Marshall was convicted of dispensing certain
drugs without a prescription. In the course of the trial seven of
the jurors were exposed to various news accounts relating that
Marshall had previously been convicted of forgery, that he and his
wife had been arrested for other narcotics offenses, and that he
had for some time practiced medicine without a license. After
interviewing the jurors, however, the trial judge denied a motion
for a mistrial, relying on the jurors' assurances that they could
maintain impartiality in spite of the news articles.
Noting that the jurors had been exposed to information with a high
potential for prejudice, this Court reversed the conviction. It
did so, however, expressly '(i)n the exercise of (its) supervisory
power to formulate and apply proper standards for enforcement of
the criminal law in the federal courts,' and not as a matter of
constitutional compulsion. Id., at 313, 79 S.Ct., at 1173.
In the face of so clear a statement, it cannot be maintained that
Marshall was a constitutional ruling now applicable, through the
Fourteenth Amendment, to the States. Petitioner argues,
nonetheless that more recent decisions of this Court have applied
to state cases the principle underlying the Marshall decision:2
that persons who have learned from news sources of a defendant's
prior criminal record are presumed to be prejudiced. We cannot
agree that Marshall has any application beyond the federal courts.
Petitioner relies principally upon Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 81
S.Ct. 1639, 6 L.Ed.2d 751 (1961), Rideau v. Louisiana, 373 U.S.
723, 83 S.Ct. 1417, 10 L.Ed.2d 663 (1963), Estes v. Texas, 381 U.S.
532, 85 S.Ct. 1628, 14 L.Ed.2d 543 (1965), and Sheppard v.
Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333, 86 S.Ct. 1507, 16 L.Ed.2d 600 (1966). In
each of these cases, this Court overturned a state-court
conviction obtained in a trial atmosphere that had been utterly
corrupted by press coverage.
In
Irvin v. Dowd the rural community in which the trial was held had
been subjected to a barrage of inflammatory publicity immediately
prior to trial, including information on the defendant's prior
convictions, his confession to 24 burglaries and six murders
including the one for which he was tried, and his unaccepted offer
to plead guilty in order to avoid the death sentence. As a result,
eight of the 12 jurors had formed an opinion that the defendant
was guilty before the trial began; some went 'so far as to say
that it would take evidence to overcome their belief' in his guilt.
366 U.S., at 728, 81 S.Ct., at 1645. In these circumstances, the
Court readily found actual prejudice against the petitioner to a
degree that rendered a fair trial impossible.
Prejudice was presumed in the circumstances under which the trials
in Rideau, Estes, and Sheppard were held. In those cases the
influence of the news media, either in the community at large or
in the courtroom itself, pervaded the proceedings. In Rideau the
defendant had 'confessed' under police interrogation to the murder
of which he stood convicted. A 20-minute film of his confession
was broadcast three times by a television station in the community
where the crime and the trial took place. In reversing, the Court
did not examine the voir dire for evidence of actual prejudice
because it considered the trial under review 'but a hollow
formality'—the real trial had occurred when tens of thousands of
people, in a community of 150,000, had seen and heard the
defendant admit his guilt before the cameras.
The trial in Estes had been conducted in a circus atmosphere, due
in large part to the intrusions of the press, which was allowed to
sit within the bar of the court and to overrun it with television
equipment. Similarly, Sheppard arose from a trial infected not
only by a background of extremely inflammatory publicity but also
by a courthouse given over to accommodate the public appetite for
carnival. The proceedings in these cases were entirely lacking in
the solemnity and sobriety to which a defendant is entitled in a
system that subscribes to any notion of fairness and rejects the
verdict of a mob. They cannot be made to stand for the proposition
that juror exposure to information about a state defendant's prior
convictions or to news accounts of the crime with which he is
charged alone presumptively deprives the defendant of due process.
To resolve this case, we must turn, therefore, to any indications
in the totality of circumstances that petitioner's trial was not
fundamentally fair.
III
The constitutional standard of fairness requires that a defendant
have 'a panel of impartial, 'indifferent' jurors.' Irvin v. Dowd,
366 U.S. at 722, 81 S.Ct. at 1642. Qualified jurors need not,
however, be totally ignorant of the facts and issues involved.
'To
hold that the mere existence of any preconceived notion as to the
guilt or innocence of an accused, without more, is sufficient to
rebut the presumption of a prospective juror's impartiality would
be to establish an impossible standard. It is sufficient if the
juror can lay aside his impression or opinion and render a verdict
based on the evidence presented in court.' Id., at 723, 81 S.Ct.
at 1642.
At
the same time, the juror's assurances that he is equal to this
task cannot be dispositive of the accused's rights, and it remains
open to the defendant to demonstrate 'the actual existence of such
an opinion in the mind of the juror as will raise the presumption
of partiality.' Ibid.
The voir dire in this case indicates no such hostility to
petitioner by the jurors who served in his trial as to suggest a
partiality that could not be laid aside. Some of the jurors had a
vague recollection of the robbery with which petitioner was
charged and each had some knowledge of petitioner's past crimes,3
but none betrayed any belief in the relevance of petitioner's past
to the present case.4
Indeed, four of the six jurors volunteered their views of its
irrelevance, and one suggested that people who have been in
trouble before are too often singled out for suspicion of each new
crime—a predisposition that could only operate in petitioner's
favor.
In the entire voir dire transcript furnished to us, there is only
one colloquy on which petitioner can base even a colorable claim
of partiality by a juror. In response to a leading and
hypothetical question, presupposing a two- or three-week
presentation of evidence against petitioner and his failure to put
on any defense, one juror conceded that his prior impression of
petitioner would dispose him to convict.5
We cannot attach great significance to this statement, however, in
light of the leading nature of counsel's questions and the juror's
other testimony indicating that he had no deep impression of
petitioner at all.
The juror testified that he did not keep up with current events
and, in fact, had never heard of petitioner until he arrived in
the room for prospective jurors where some veniremen were
discussing him. He did not know that petitioner was 'a convicted
jewel thief' even then; it was petitioner's counsel who informed
him of this fact. And he volunteered that petitioner's murder
conviction, of which he had just heard, would not be relevant to
his guilt or innocence in the present case, since '(w)e are not
trying him for murder.'
Even these indicia of impartiality might be disregarded in a case
where the general atmosphere in the community or courtroom is
sufficiently inflammatory, but the circumstances surrounding
petitioner's trial are not at all of that variety. Petitioner
attempts to portray them as inflammatory by reference to the
publicity to which the community was exposed. The District Court
found, however, that the news articles concerning petitioner had
appeared almost entirely during the period between December 1967
and January 1969, the latter date being seven months before the
jury in this case was selected. 363 F.Supp., at 1228. They were,
moreover, largely factual in nature. Compare Beck v. Washington,
369 U.S. 541, 82 S.Ct. 955, 8 L.Ed.2d 98 (1962), with Sheppard v.
Maxwell, supra.
The length to which the trial court must go in order to select
jurors who appear to be impartial is another factor relevant in
evaluating those jurors' assurances of impartiality. In a
community where most veniremen will admit to a disqualifying
prejudice, the reliability of the others' protestations may be
drawn into question; for it is then more probable that they are
part of a community deeply hostile to the accused, and more likely
that they may unwittingly have been influenced by it. In Irvin v.
Dowd, for example, the Court noted that 90% of those examined on
the point were inclined to believe in the accused's guilt, and the
court had excused for this cause 268 of the 430 veniremen. In the
present case, by contrast, 20 of the 78 persons questioned were
excused because they indicated an opinion as to petitioner's guilt.6
This may indeed be 20 more than would occur in the trial of a
totally obscure person, but it by no means suggests a community
with sentiment so poisoned against petitioner as to impeach the
indifference of jurors who displayed no animus of their own.
In
sum, we are unable to conclude, in the circumstances presented in
this case, that petitioner did not receive a fair trial.
Petitioner has failed to show that the setting of the trial was
inherently prejudicial or that the jury-selection process of which
he complains permits an inference of actual prejudice. The
judgment of the Court of Appeals must therefore be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
*****
Mr.
Chief Justice BURGER, concurring in the judgment.
I
agree with Mr. Justice BRENNAN that the trial judge was woefully
remiss in failing to insulate prospective jurors from the bizarre
media coverage of this case and in not taking steps to prevent
pretrial discussion of the case among them. Although I would not
hesitate to reverse petitioner's conviction in the exercise of our
supervisory powers, were this a federal case. I agree with the
Court that the circumstances of petitioner's trial did not rise to
the level of a violation of the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment.
*****
Mr.
Justice BRENNAN, dissenting.
I
dissent. Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.S. 717, 81 S.Ct. 1639, 6 L.Ed.2d 751
(1961), requires reversal of this conviction. As in that case,
petitioner here was denied a fair trial. The risk that taint of
widespread publicity regarding his criminal background, known to
all members of the jury, infected the jury's deliberations is
apparent, the trial court made no attempt to prevent discussion of
the case or petitioner's previous criminal exploits among the
prospective jurors, and one juror freely admitted that he was
predisposed to convict petitioner.
During voir dire, petitioner's counsel had the following colloquy
with that juror:
'Q. Now, when you go into that jury room and you decide upon
Murphy's guilt or innocence, you are going to take into account
that fact that he is a convicted murderer; aren't you?
'A. Not if we are listening to the case, I wouldn't.
'Q. But you know about it?
A.
How can you not know about it?
'Q. Fine, thank you.
'When
you go into the jury room, the fact that he is a convicted
murderer, that is going to influence your verdict; is it not?
'A. We are not trying him for murder.
'Q. The fact that he is a convicted murderer and jewel thief, that
would influence your verdict? 'A. I didn't know he was a convicted
jewel thief.
'Q. Oh, I see.
'I
am sorry I put words in your mouth.
'Now,
sir, after two or three weeks of being locked up in a downtown
hotel, as the Court determines, and after hearing the State's
case, and after hearing no case on behalf of Murphy, and hearing
no testimony from Murphy saying, 'I am innocent, Mr. (Juror)'—when
you go into the jury room, sir, all these facts are going to
influence your verdict?
'A. I imagine it would be.
'Q. And in fact, you are saying if Murphy didn't testify, and if
he doesn't offer evidence, 'My experience of him is such that
right now I would find him guilty.'
'A. I believe so.'
I
cannot agree with the Court that the obvious bias of this juror
may be overlooked simply because the juror's response was
occasioned by a 'leading and hypothetical question,' ante, at 801.
Indeed, the hypothetical became reality when petitioner chose not
to take the stand and offered no evidence. Thus petitioner was
tried by a juror predisposed, because of his knowledge of
petitioner's previous crimes, to find him guilty of this one.
Others who ultimately served as jurors revealed similar prejudice
toward petitioner on voir dire. One juror conceded that it would
be difficult, during deliberations, to put out of his mind that
petitioner was a convicted criminal. He also admitted that he did
not 'hold a convicted felon in the same regard as another person
who has never been convicted of a felony,' and admitted further
that he had termed petitioner a 'menace.'
A third juror testified that she knew from several sources that
petitioner was a convicted murderer,1
and was aware that the community regarded petitioner as a criminal
who 'should be put away.' She disclaimed having a fixed opinion
about the result she would reach, but acknowledged that the fact
that petitioner was a convicted criminal would probably influence
her verdict: 'A. Probably not.
'Q. And it would influence your verdict; right?
'A. Probably.'
Still another juror testified that the comments of venire members
in discussing the case had made him 'sick to (his) stomach.' He
testified that one venireman had said that petitioner was 'thoroughly
rotten,' and that another had said: 'Hang him, he's guilty.'2
Moreover, the Court ignores the crucial significance of the fact
that at no time before or during this daily buildup of prejudice
against Murphy did the trial judge instruct the prospective jurors
not to discuss the case among themselves. Indeed the trial judge
took no steps to insulate the jurors from media coverage of the
case or from the many news articles that discussed petitioner's
last criminal exploits.
It
is of no moment that several jurors ultimately testified that they
would try to exclude from their deliberations their knowledge of
petitioner's past misdeeds and of his community reputation. Irvin
held in like circumstances that little weight could be attached to
such selfserving protestations:
No
doubt each juror was sincere when he said that he would be fair
and impartial to petitioner, but the psychological impact
requiring such a declaration before one's fellows is often its
father. Where so many, so many times, admitted prejudice, such a
statement of impartiality can be given little weight. As one of
the jurors put it, 'You can't forget what you hear and see." 366
U.S., at 728, 81 S.Ct. at 1645.
On
the record of this voir dire, therefore, the conclusion is to me
inescapable that the attitude of the entire venire toward Murphy
reflected the 'then current community pattern of thought as
indicated by the popular news media,' id., at 725, 81 S.Ct. at
1644, and was infected with the taint of the view that he was a
'criminal' guilty of notorious offenses, including that for which
he was on trial. It is a plain case, from a review of the entire
voir dire, where 'the extent and nature of the publicity has
caused such a buildup of prejudice that excluding the
preconception of guilt from the deliberations would be too
difficult for the jury to be honestly found impartial.' United
States ex rel. Bloeth v. Denno, 2 Cir., 313 F.2d 364, 372 (CA2
1963). In my view, the denial of a change of venue was therefore
prejudicial error, and I would reverse the conviction.
See, e.g., New York Times, May 9, 1968, p. 51 (surrender
on murder indictment); July 3, 1968, p. 70 (held incompetent to
stand trial); Aug. 15, 1968, p. 44 (indicted in securities case);
Feb, 18, 1969, p. 31 (murder trial scheduled); Mar. 2, 1969, p. 63
(convicted of murder).
One juror who did not know that petitioner had
been previously convicted for the theft of the Star of India
sapphire, one who did not know of the murder conviction, and one
who had never heard about the securities case were informed about
them by petitioner's counsel, who then asked whether that
knowledge would not prejudice them against petitioner. We will not
readily discount the assurances of a juror insofar as his exposure
to a defendant's past crimes comes from the defendant or counsel.
We note also, and disapprove counsel's habitual references to his
client, at voir dire, as 'Murph the Surf' rather than by his name.
We must distinguish between mere familiarity
with petitioner or his past and an actual predisposition against
him, just as we have in the past distinguished largely factual
publicity from that which is invidious or inflammatory. E.g., Beck
v. Washington, 369 U.S. 541, 556, 82 S.Ct. 955, 963, 8 L.Ed.2d 98
(1962). To ignore the real differences in the potential for
prejudice would not advance the cause of fundamental fairness, but
only make impossible the timely prosecution of persons who are
well known in the community, whether they be notorious or merely
prominent.
'Q. Now, when you go into that jury room and
you decide upon Murphy's guilt on innocence, you are going to take
into account that fact that he is a convicted murderer; aren't you?
'A. Not if we are listening to the case, I
wouldn't.
'Q. But you know about it?
'A. How can you not know about it?
'Q. Fine, thank you.
'When you go into the jury room, the fact that
he is a convicted murderer, that is going to influence your
verdict; is it not?
'A. We are not trying him for murder.
'Q. The fact that he is a convicted murderer
and jewel thief, that would influence your verdict?
'A. I didn't know he was a convicted jewel
thief.
'Q. Oh, I see.
'I am sorry I put words in your mouth.
'Now, sir, after two or three weeks of being
locked up in a downtown hotel, as the Court determines, and after
hearing the State's case, and after hearing no case on behalf of
Murphy, and hearing no testimony from Murphy saying, 'I am
innocent, Mr. (juror's name),'—when you go into the jury room,
sir, all these facts are going to influence your verdict?
'A. I imagine it would be.
'Q. And in fact, you are saying if Murphy
didn't testify, and if he doesn't offer evidence, 'My experience
of him is such that right now I would find him guilty.'
The juror stated that she acquired a portion of
her knowledge of petitioner's criminal background from an article
in that week's Miami Herald entitled, 'Defense Exhausts Jury
Challenges in Murphy Trial,' which included the sentence: 'Jury
selection will continue today in the trial of beach boy hoodlum
serving a life sentence for murder in connection with the Whisky
Creek slaying of two secretaries in 1968.'
'Q. Now, if you go into that jury room and
deliberate with your fellow jurors, in your deliberations, will
you consider the fact that Murphy is a convicted murderer and
jewel thief?
'A. Well, he has been convicted of murder. So,
I guess that is what I would—
'Q. You would consider that in your verdict,
right?
'A. Right.
'Q. And that would influence your verdict;
would it not?
'A. If that is what you say, I guess it would.
'Q. I am not concerned about what I say,
because if I said it, they wouldn't print it. It would influence
your verdict?
'A. It probably would.
'Q. When you go into that jury room, you cannot
forget the fact that it is Murph the Surf; that he is a convicted
murderer, and a jewel thief—you can't put that out of your mind,
no matter what they tell you; can you, ma'am?
A juror chosen as an alternate testified that
she did not know whether she 'would give the same fair and
impartial treatment to a convicted killer as (she) would to
another person.' She added that she did not know whether she could
be fair and impartial in her deliberations in the case:
'Q. The question is, would you compromise your
verdict; could you go there—and say the State proved his guilt and
the defense proved that he was insane, but, 'I'm not going to let
that guy walk the streets, so I'm going to find him guilty, period?'
'Would you do that?
'A. I don't know at this point.
'Q. Right.
'So in fact, ma'am, at this point you cannot
tell us whether you can give a fair and impartial deliberation
about Murphy, number one, because of the lack of evidence; and
number two, because of what you know about Murphy; isn't that a
fact?