United States v. Bullard

                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 93-1718

                  UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

                          Appellee,

                              v.

                      MILLER M. BULLARD,

                    Defendant, Appellant.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

              FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

         [Hon. A. David Mazzone, U.S. District Judge]
                                                    

                                         

                            Before

               Selya and Boudin, Circuit Judges,
                                               

                 and Carter,* District Judge.
                                            

                                         

Warren R. Thompson, by Appointment of the Court, for appellant.
                  
Kevin J.  Cloherty, Assistant  United States  Attorney, with  whom
                  
Donald K. Stern, United  States Attorney, was on brief  for the United
           
States.

                                         

                       October 20, 1994
                                         

                

*Of the District of Maine, sitting by designation.

     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.   On July 20, 1992, an  armed man
                          

held  up  the Baybank  branch  at  285  Huntington Avenue  in

Boston,  and  escaped  with  approximately  $421.     Shortly

thereafter,  law  enforcement   agents  arrested   defendant-

appellant Miller  M. Bullard, who  was then charged  with one

count  of armed  robbery  of a  federally insured  depository

institution, 18  U.S.C.     2213(a), (d).   A jury  convicted

Bullard on October 22, 1992.  He has appealed his conviction.

We affirm.

     Bullard's trial lasted three days, and for a significant

portion of that  time, he represented himself.   The district

court  had  originally  appointed  counsel for  him,  but  he

objected  to  that appointment,  and  the  court granted  his

motion  to proceed  pro se.   The  court also  appointed Owen
                          

Walker  of the  federal  public defender's  office to  act as

standby  counsel.   Walker sat  with Bullard  at  the defense

table throughout trial.  Walker presented opening and closing

arguments,  and  he also  cross-examined  the key  government

witness.

     Bullard's  central claims  of error  concern issues  not

raised at trial.  With  one possible qualification, we review

these claims  for plain  error, which encompasses  only those

errors that are both "plain" and involve either a miscarriage

of   justice  or   deviations   that  seriously   impair  the

fundamental   fairness  and  basic  integrity  of  the  trial

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proceedings.  United States v. Olano, 113 S. Ct. 1770 (1993);
                                    

United  States v. Griffin, 818 F.2d 97, 100 (1st Cir.), cert.
                                                             

denied, 484 U.S. 844 (1987).  
      

     Bullard   first  contends   that  even  though   he  was

representing himself, he was left out of a conference between

counsel and the judge concerning the possible inattentiveness

of  one   juror,  thus   violating  his   right  to  pro   se
                                                             

representation.  During the trial, the district judge noticed

that on one day  an individual juror appeared to  be somewhat

less attentive than  normal.  When  the jurors were  excused,

the district judge asked  the juror in question to  remain in

the courtroom and then questioned  the juror, in the presence

of the prosecutor and Walker.

     The juror  acknowledged that  the night before,  she had

worked a  double  shift  and  was somewhat  tired,  but  also

asserted  that she was perfectly  capable of continuing.  The

court  then excused the  juror from the  room and effectively

invited the  prosecutor and Walker  to object to  the juror's

continuation  if dissatisfied  with  her  answers.    Neither

counsel objected  to the juror's continuing.   Walker himself

noted that the juror had seemed to be "on the ball."

     The record  does not reveal whether Bullard  was in fact

present during the conference,  which was conducted in court.

Bullard now  asserts that he  was absent for  this conference

(his brief cites only to a telephone call between Bullard and

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his appellate counsel).   It is possible that the  marshal or

court security  officer removed Bullard before  the juror was

questioned and also possible that some or all of the colloquy

occurred  at  sidebar.   The  transcript is  silent  on these

points.

     Since the record is unclear on this factual issue, there

certainly  is no "plain" error.   Of course,  one might argue

that  it is  unfair  to hold  this  lack of  clarity  against

Bullard  since  he himself  may not  have  been aware  of the

episode  until he  reviewed  the trial  transcript after  his

conviction.   Still, if the issue were to be properly pressed

on appeal,  Bullard or his  appellate counsel ought  at least

have  asked the district court to supplement the record.  See
                                                             

Fed. R.  App. P. 10(e) (allowing  supplementation of district

court record to correct mistake or omission).

     Out  of  an abundance  of  caution,  we have  considered

whether Bullard  was actually prejudiced,  even assuming that

he was absent during the episode.  Of course, a defendant  is

normally entitled  to be  present during a  court proceeding,

and even more so when acting pro se.  But here Bullard was at
                                   

least  represented by  standby counsel  at the  proceeding in

question.   Given that the  record does not  show Bullard was

absent,  we  think  that it  goes  as  far  as required,  and

arguably  beyond, to  ask  whether his  possible absence  has
                                                

created demonstrable or likely prejudice.

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     Here,  we see no prejudice  at all.   A sharp-eyed trial

judge, commendably attentive, noticed some signs that a juror

might  not have been fully  alert.  Sua  sponte he questioned
                                               

the  juror who denied any illness, explained that she had had

a late night, and in substance asserted her wish to continue.

Probably,  the attention  of  an average  juror, perhaps  all

jurors,  drifts  at some  point during  a  trial.   The trial

judge,  who had  seen the  juror's actions,  felt no  need to

press for or order her removal; and neither counsel asked for

it.

     There is nothing  to show that the juror  missed crucial

evidence  or  exhibited  serious  or  prolonged  inattention;

Bullard says  otherwise in his brief but  provides nothing to

support the  assertion.  The evidence  against Bullard, which

we need not describe in detail, was substantial;  it included

an eye witness identification of him as the bank robber, made

by a teller who had been standing in the teller booth next to

the  one  robbed.   Any  notion  that  Bullard  was convicted

because  the  juror in  question  was not  excused  is highly

implausible.

     Bullard's other contentions relate  to a brief encounter

with  a police  officer before booking.   Prior  to Bullard's

initial  booking photograph, Detective  Carroll of the Boston

Police  Department took a picture of  him because Carroll had

noticed at the arrest  that Bullard wore a baseball  hat with

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the brim cocked up--a style that Carroll felt was unusual and

one  depicted in the photographs derived from the film in the

bank  surveillance camera.  Bullard refused to put his hat on

when Carroll asked  him to, but  then relented and  Bullard's

photograph was taken with his hat on.

     During  Carroll's  trial  testimony, he  mentioned  that

Bullard  had refused  to  put his  hat  on, and  Bullard  now

alleges that such testimony  violated his right against self-

incrimination.   The  prosecutor also  alluded  to  Bullard's

refusal  during her  closing argument.   In  addition, before

trial   the  prosecutor  told  the  court  that  she  had  no

statements  of  the  defendant  to turn  over  in  discovery;

Bullard now alleges that this was untrue (because his refusal

was  a statement)  and constituted  a violation  of discovery

obligations and misconduct by the prosecutor.

     None  of these  matters  comes anywhere  close to  plain

error.  We start with Bullard's claim that his refusal to put

on a hat  was a statement that the  prosecutor had to produce

before  trial.  Bullard's refusal to put  on his hat does not

fit under the literal language of Fed. R.  Crim. P. 16, which

requires the government to turn  over statements only if they

were made in the course of  interrogation.  The rule has been

so  construed by  the courts.   See,  e.g., United  States v.
                                                          

Reeves, 730  F.2d  1189  (8th  Cir. 1984).    Certainly,  the
      

failure to disclose  in advance Carroll's testimony as to the

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refusal does not plainly violate any  cited discovery rule or
                        

order.

     Bullard  also  claims that  it  was  misconduct for  the

prosecutor to  advise the court before trial  that "there are

no statements of the  defendant" and then to elicit  at trial

Bullard's refusal.   Actually, it  is not clear  that Bullard

did express his refusal  in words, but there is  certainly no

indication  of a conscious  deception by the  prosecutor.  If

Bullard was  surprised by the detective's  testimony and felt

he  had been misled, he was free  to raise the point at trial

and ask for a brief delay or continuance.    

     Bullard's   self-incrimination    claim   is   similarly

unavailing.   Bullard  properly  does not  complain on  self-

incrimination  grounds  about  the government's  use  of  the

photograph showing him in his hat.  It is well  accepted that

a  defendant's Fifth  Amendment right  is not  compromised by

such physical evidence; a defendant can be  obligated to give

blood, stand  in a  lineup, provide handwriting  examples and

cooperate  in other  similar  fashions.   E.g., Schmerber  v.
                                                         

California, 384  U.S. 757 (1966); Gilbert  v. California, 388
                                                        

U.S. 218 (1967).    What Bullard appears  to argue instead is

that his initial refusal  to cooperate by putting on  his hat

amounts  to  using  his  own words--namely,  his  refusal  to

cooperate--against him as evidence of consciousness of guilt.

The prosecutor did  not urge this  inference and referred  to

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the  refusal primarily  in connection  with an  argument that

Bullard  and  the robber  wore their  hats  in the  same way.

Still, the inference is pretty obvious.

     In  many circumstances,  a defendant's refusal  to speak

with the police or answer questions is not allowed to be used

against him.  The concern is not that the silence or words of

refusal are  themselves compelled testimony, for  the silence

or  words of refusal are not compelled.   Rather, the fear is

that  using the  refusal  against the  defendant would  place

undue and inappropriate pressure upon him to surrender his or
                                

her constitutional right to remain silent.  In some cases, an

inference from silence  could also be unfair  for a different

reason;  the Supreme  Court has said  that a  Miranda warning
                                                     

carries the implication that there is no penalty for silence,

and  the  defendant may  reasonably  rely  on the  assurance.

Doyle v. Ohio, 426 U.S. 610, 618 (1976).
             

     The present  case  is quite  different.   Bullard had  a

Fifth Amendment right  to remain  silent but he  had no  such

right  to refuse to don a hat,  stand in a lineup, or provide

fingerprints.    Since he  had no  such  right, then  to draw

inference of  guilt from his refusal  to cooperate physically

does  not place  improper  pressure  on  him to  surrender  a

protected right.  Nor does a Miranda warning promise or imply
                                    

that a defendant can with impunity refuse to put on a hat.

                             -8-

     Of course, in some situations a  refusal to cooperate by

providing  physical   evidence   may  be   defended   because

cooperation   would  itself   reveal   the  content   of  the

defendant's mind.   See, e.g., Fisher  v. United States,  425
                                                       

U.S. 391, 410 (1976); In re Kave, 760 F.2d 343, 358 (1st Cir.
                                

1985).   But this case involves  no such danger.   As for the

logic  of the inference, an  inference based on  a refusal to

cooperate where cooperation itself can be compelled and would

be  expected from an innocent person, is no different than an

inference of guilt based on flight to avoid arrest.

     We  do  not want  to  be  understood  as giving  blanket

approval to  testimony of a defendant's  refusal to cooperate

in  physical  activities.   An  inference of  guilt  might be

irrational in some circumstances  (e.g., a defendant refusing
                                       

to  submit  to  a  dangerous operation  to  recover  evidence

against  him).   There may  be a  range of other  cases where

testimony or comment about a defendant's refusal to cooperate

in   physical  activities  could  be  unduly  prejudicial  or

threaten  constitutional rights.   But  no such  situation is

apparent here, and there is certainly no plain error.

     Affirmed.
             

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