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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
STATE OF ALASKA, )
) Court of Appeals No. A-11389
Appellant, ) Trial Court No. 4FA-11-4262 CR
)
v. )
) OPINION
TARA LEIGHTON, )
)
Appellee. ) No. 2431— October 24, 2014
)
Petition from the Superior Court, Fourth Judicial District,
Fairbanks, Randy M. Olsen, Judge.
Appearances: Tamara E. de Lucia and Timothy W. Terrell,
Assistant Attorneys General, Office of Special Prosecutions and
Appeals, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney
General, Juneau, for the Appellant. Wendy M. Doxey, Law
Offices of William R. Satterberg Jr., Fairbanks, for the
Appellee.
Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Hanley,
District Court Judge.*
Judge HANLEY.
*
Sitting by assignment made pursuant to article IV, section 16 of the Alaska
Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).
In this appeal, we are asked to decide whether the grand jury clause of the
Alaska Constitution (article I, section 8) requires grand juries to be instructed that they
have absolute discretion to refuse to return an indictment, even when the State presents
sufficient evidence to support the accusation. In this case, the superior court ruled that
grand juries must be instructed in this fashion. For the reasons explained here, we
reverse that decision.
Underlying facts and the superior court’s ruling
Tara Leighton was indicted on five counts of first-degree sexual abuse of
a minor for engaging in sexual penetration with a thirteen-year-old girl who played on
a sports team that Leighton coached. Leighton moved to dismiss her indictment, arguing
that the grand jurors should have been instructed that they could refuse to return the
indictment even though the State’s evidence was sufficient to justify the charges.
The Alaska Supreme Court has recognized that the grand jury acts “as both
a shield and [a] sword of justice.”1 On the one hand, the grand jury is an accusatory and
investigative body “tasked with determining whether criminal proceedings against the
accused should be instituted.”2 But the grand jury also plays a protective role,
“operat[ing] to control abuses by the government and protect[ing] the interests of the
accused.”3
In accordance with this law, the presiding judge of the Fourth Judicial
District instructed Leighton’s grand jury that its duty was two-fold:
1
Cameron v. State, 171 P.3d 1154, 1156 (Alaska 2007).
2
Id. (citing United States v. Calandra, 414 U.S. 338, 343-44 (1974)).
3
Id. (alterations in Cameron) (quoting Preston v. State, 615 P.2d 594, 602 (Alaska
1980) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
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First, grand jurors have an obligation to the people of the
State of Alaska to compel persons charged with serious
criminal conduct to answer for that conduct if there are
grounds for the charge. At the same time, however, grand
jurors have an obligation to every individual to ensure that no
one is subjected to criminal prosecution without good cause.
The presiding judge then gave the instruction that is at issue in this case. We have
italicized the language that Judge Olsen believed was improper:
Once you have heard the State’s evidence along with any
additional evidence presented at the request of the grand jury,
you must decide whether that evidence, if unexplained or
uncontradicted, would warrant conviction of the defendant.
If at least ten of you believe the evidence has met that
standard, the indictment should be endorsed “a true bill” and
signed by your foreperson. If not, the proposed indictment
should be endorsed “not a true bill” and signed by your
foreperson.
Judge Olsen concluded that the above-quoted three sentences did not
properly convey the grand jury’s “absolute, unfettered discretion” under the Alaska
Constitution to refuse to return a true bill.
The judge acknowledged that the word “should” means something different
from the word “shall” — that “should” does not convey a command, but rather “an
expectation of what ought to be done, with some inherent flexibility as to the actor’s
ability to depart from the expectation.”
Nevertheless, Judge Olsen concluded that “should” did not sufficiently
convey the grand jury’s complete and unfettered discretion to refuse a proposed
indictment. The judge ruled that the presiding judge was required to use the word “may”
when describing the grand jury’s authority to return a true bill because this was the word
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used in article I, section 8 of the state constitution: “The grand jury shall consist of at
least twelve citizens, a majority of whom concurring may return an indictment.”4
Judge Olsen further concluded that this error in instructing the grand jury
could not be harmless because no one could predict how any particular grand jury might
exercise this absolute discretion in any particular case.
After the superior court denied the State’s motion for reconsideration, the
State filed this petition for review.
Why we conclude that the superior court’s ruling is based on a
misinterpretation of the grand jury clause of the Alaska Constitution
Judge Olsen’s ruling that the grand jury should be instructed that it “may”
return an indictment was based on a misreading of the grand jury clause of the Alaska
Constitution (article I, section 8). This clause provides, in pertinent part:
The grand jury shall consist of at least twelve citizens, a
majority of whom concurring may return an indictment.
As the State points out in its brief, the first part of this sentence fixes the
minimum number of citizens required to form a grand jury, while the second part of this
sentence defines the minimum number of grand jurors — “a majority” of the entire grand
jury — who must concur in an indictment before the grand jury is allowed to indict
someone.
In this sentence, the phrase “may return an indictment” stands for the
concept of “is authorized to return an indictment.” This phrase does not refer to the legal
test for when an indictment is justified, nor does this phrase refer to the grand jury’s
power to refuse to endorse a proposed indictment.
4
Emphasis added.
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There is nothing in the language of this sentence, and nothing in the
discussions in the Alaska Constitutional Convention pertaining to this sentence,5 to
suggest that the purpose of this language was to create or acknowledge a grand jury right
of “nullification” — a right to refuse to indict someone for any reason the grand jurors
might see fit.
Moreover, to the extent that grand juries in Alaska have a power of
nullification (an issue we do not decide), the instruction used by the presiding judge
adequately conveyed this concept. As we explained earlier, the presiding judge told the
grand jurors that if at least ten of them believed that the State’s evidence met the standard
for issuing an indictment, “the indictment should be endorsed ‘a true bill’ and signed by
your foreperson.”
Judge Olsen himself acknowledged that the word “should” did not convey
a command, but only an “expectation of what ought to be done” — and that this word
conveyed to the grand jurors “some inherent flexibility ... to depart from the
expectation.”6
To support his ruling, Judge Olsen additionally relied on a statute,
AS 12.40.050, which provides: “The grand jury may indict or present a person for a
crime upon sufficient evidence, whether that person has been held to answer for the
crime or not.” While this statute uses the word “may,” it does not address the grand
jury’s discretion to refuse to return an indictment. Rather, the statute addresses a
different issue: the grand jury’s authority to return an indictment on charges that the
5
6 Proceedings of the Alaska Constitutional Convention 63-64, 71 (Dec. 15, 1955).
6
See United States v. Navarro-Vargas, 408 F.3d 1184, 1204 (9th Cir. 2005) (holding
that instructing the grand jurors that they “should” indict if they find probable cause did not
violate the grand jury’s independence because “[a]s a matter of pure semantics” this wording
“does not eliminate discretion on the part of the grand jurors” and it “leav[es] room for the
grand jury to dismiss even if it finds probable cause”).
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State has not proposed, if the evidence justifies the charges.7 Again, the word “may” is
being used in the sense of “is authorized to.”
In sum, neither Judge Olsen nor Leighton has offered us a convincing basis
for concluding (1) that grand jurors have absolute discretion to refuse to return an
indictment — for any reason, or for no reason at all — and (2) that the superior court is
prohibited from instructing grand jurors that they “should” return an indictment if the
evidence justifies it.
We acknowledge that the assistant district attorney who presented
Leighton’s case to the grand jury gave the grand jurors additional instructions that
arguably contradicted the presiding judge’s instructions. But Judge Olsen’s ruling in this
case was based solely on the wording of the presiding judge’s instructions, and that is
the only ruling before us.
Conclusion
The superior court’s decision is REVERSED, and the indictment against
Leighton is REINSTATED.
7
See Sleziak v. State, 454 P.2d 252, 261 & n.30 (Alaska 1969).
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