San Francisco Chronicle

Justices rule racial bias in jury may require new trial

- By David G. Savage David G. Savage is a Tribune Co. writer.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court took a strong new stand against racial bias in jury rooms, ruling for the first time that reports of racist comments by jurors may require setting aside a verdict and holding a new trial.

Justice Anthony Kennedy, announcing the court’s decision Monday, wrote that the “imperative to purge racial prejudice from the administra­tion of justice” requires setting aside the traditiona­l rule that bars judges from second-guessing what went on in the jury room.

The 5-3 decision announced a limited exception to that rule against second-guessing juries. The new rule covers cases in which “one or more jurors made statements exhibiting overt racial bias that cast serious doubt on the fairness and impartiali­ty of the jury’s deliberati­ons and resulting verdict.”

Kennedy did not say exactly what should happen in such cases, other than the trial judge should look into the matter, question the former jurors and then decide whether a new trial is called for.

The dissenters, led by Justice Samuel Alito, called the decision “well intentione­d” but unwise.

“Today, with the admirable intention of providing justice for one criminal defendant, the court not only pries open the door; it rules that respecting the privacy of the jury room, as our legal system has done for centuries, violates the Constituti­on,” Alito said. “This is a startling developmen­t.”

The majority ruled in favor of a Mexican American man who was convicted of sexually assaulting two teenage girls in the bathroom of a horse-race track in Colorado.

The identity of the assailant was in doubt, but jurors convicted Miguel Angel Peña-Rodriguez, a track worker, of unlawful sexual contact and harassment.

After the trial, two jurors told an attorney that a third juror had said that “Mexican men had a bravado that caused them to believe” they could get away with sexually assaulting women.

“I think he did it because he’s Mexican, and Mexican men take whatever they want,” the juror said, according to the other jurors’ reports.

The judge reviewed their sworn statements, but said Colorado law prohibited reopening a trial based on what was said in the jury room. The Colorado Supreme Court agreed and upheld the so-called noimpeachm­ent rule.

The Supreme Court overturned that decision in PeñaRodrig­uez vs. Colorado. The court sent the case back to the Colorado courts to decide how to proceed.

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