Griffin v. California

Griffin v. California
Argued March 9, 1965
Decided April 28, 1965
Full case nameGriffin v. California
Citations380 U.S. 609 (more)
85 S. Ct. 1229; 14 L. Ed. 2d 106
Case history
PriorDefendant convicted, California court; affirmed, California Supreme Court.
SubsequentSubsequent trial ended in a mistrial; third trial found defendant guilty of murder.
Holding
Prosecutor's reference in closing argument to defendant's exercising his right to refuse to testify, and instruction allowing jury to consider it, violate that right.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Earl Warren
Associate Justices
Hugo Black · William O. Douglas
Tom C. Clark · John M. Harlan II
William J. Brennan Jr. · Potter Stewart
Byron White · Arthur Goldberg
Case opinions
MajorityDouglas, joined by Black, Clark, Brennan, Goldberg
ConcurrenceHarlan
DissentStewart, joined by White
Warren took no part in the consideration or decision of the case.
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amend. V, by way of XIV

Griffin v. California, 380 U.S. 609 (1965), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled, by a 6–2 vote, that it is a violation of a defendant's Fifth Amendment rights for the prosecutor to comment to the jury on the defendant's declining to testify, or for the judge to instruct the jury that such silence is evidence of guilt.[1]

The ruling specified that this new extension to defendants' Fifth Amendment rights was binding on all States through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. This "no-comment rule" had already been binding on the federal government's courts because of an 1878 law.

Background of the case

Edward Dean Griffin was convicted of the murder of Essie Mae Hodson before a jury in a California court. Griffin had been invited into an apartment shared by Hodson and her boyfriend, Eddie Seay. After going to bed, Seay was awakened by noise; he saw Griffin and Hodson struggling, and Hodson said Griffin had tried to force her to have sex. After Seay locked Griffin outside the apartment, Griffin broke back into the apartment and struck Seay, who ran to a bar for help. Upon returning, Griffin and Hodson were gone. In the morning, a witness saw Griffin, buttoning up his pants, coming out of a very large trash box in an alley about 300 feet from Hodson's apartment. The witness found Hodson in the trash box, bleeding and apparently in shock. She died at a hospital the next day from her injuries.[2] Griffin, who already had multiple felony convictions, did not testify at the trial.[3]

As the U.S. Supreme Court said in its ruling, the prosecutor in the final argument to the jury "made much of the failure of [Griffin] to testify":

Essie Mae is dead. She can't tell you her side of the story. The defendant won't.

The judge, in his instructions to the jury, stated that a defendant has a constitutional right not to testify, and that this did not create a presumption of guilt, nor reduce the need for the prosecution to prove its case; but also stated to the jury:

As to any evidence or facts against him which the defendant can reasonably be expected to deny or explain because of facts within his knowledge, if he does not testify or if, though he does testify, he fails to deny or explain such evidence, the jury may take that failure into consideration as tending to indicate the truth of such evidence.

This jury instruction was valid under the California Constitution, whose "comment practice" clause in Article I stated at the time, "[I]n any criminal case, whether the defendant testifies or not, his failure to explain or to deny by his testimony any evidence or facts in the case against him may be commented upon by the court and by counsel, and may be considered by the court or the jury."

Griffin was convicted and sentenced to the death penalty. The California Supreme Court affirmed the conviction, and subsequently the U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari to determine "whether comment on the failure to testify violated the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth Amendment which we made applicable to the States by the Fourteenth in Malloy v. Hogan."

Until the late 19th century, defendants in criminal trials in the United States were not allowed to testify. Starting in 1864, the States started to allow this practice, until by the end of the 20th century, Georgia was the only State that still prohibited testimony from the defendant.[4]

A new concern was that although under the Fifth Amendment no defendant could be forced to testify, now that testifying was permitted, "the failure of a defendant to testify would be seen as a confession of guilt and that jurors would draw this inference regardless of any instructions they might receive."[5] To help reduce the impact or the likelihood of this inference, the federal government passed a law in 1878 called the "no-comment rule", prohibiting prosecutors from commenting on the failure to testify, and prohibiting any presumption against the defendant based on his failure to testify.[5] (This law is currently 18 U.S.C. § 3481.)

This federal law applied only to the federal courts, and because of the principle of federalism, the States made their own decisions on this matter. For example, the California Constitution explicitly permitted counsel and the judge to comment on the failure to testify.

In two rulings before Griffin, Twining v. New Jersey (1908) and Adamson v. California (1947), the Supreme Court upheld state laws allowing such adverse comments, ruling that even if adverse comments did violate defendants' Fifth Amendment rights, the Fifth Amendment did not bind the States. In Malloy v. Hogan (1964), the Court reversed this stance, ruling that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment extended Fifth Amendment protections against self-incrimination to State trials.

The ruling

Justice Douglas wrote for the Court that a prosecutor's or judge's comment to the jury about a defendant's refusal to testify "is a remnant of the 'inquisitorial system of criminal justice', which the Fifth Amendment outlaws. It is a penalty imposed by courts for exercising a constitutional privilege. It cuts down on the privilege by making its assertion costly."

The Court then noted that an objection to this logic might be that a jury might find it "natural and irresistible" to infer the guilt of a defendant who refused to testify while possessing facts about the evidence against him, and so a judge's commenting upon the refusal did not "magnify that inference into a penalty for asserting a constitutional privilege"; but went on to state that a judge's comment on the refusal "solemnizes the silence of the accused into evidence against him."

In a footnote, the Court noted that this ruling was "no innovation", because a majority of the Court had already written in Adamson v. California (1947) that California's "comment practice" violated the Fifth Amendment. At the time, however, the Court had not yet ruled that the Fourteenth Amendment made the Fifth Amendment applicable to the States.

Justice Harlan's concurrence

Justice Harlan concurred "with great reluctance", agreeing with the Court that "within the federal judicial system the Fifth Amendment bars adverse comment by federal prosecutors and judges on a defendant's failure to take the stand in a criminal trial", but writing that this "no-comment" rule was a "non-fundamental" part of the Fifth Amendment, and that he would only apply it to the States because of the previous term's Malloy v. Hogan decision. (Justice Harlan had dissented from the Malloy decision, writing that the "compelled uniformity" of applying the Fifth Amendment to the States "carries extremely mischievous, if not dangerous, consequences for our federal system".[6]) Justice Harlan wrote that state and federal courts need not run by the same rules and that cases such as Griffin showed that the practical tendency had been for the federal judiciary to override the state judiciary, which was contrary to the basic idea of federalism; and that he hoped "that the Court will eventually return to constitutional paths which, until recently, it has followed throughout its history."

The dissent

Justice Stewart, joined by Justice White, dissented, writing that the Fifth Amendment states that no person "shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself", and that California's "comment rule" did not "compel" the defendant nor anyone else to testify. Also, "the California procedure is not only designed to protect the defendant against unwarranted inferences which might be drawn by an uninformed jury; it is also an attempt by the State to recognize and articulate what it believes to be the natural probative force of certain facts."

Justice Stewart wrote that the formulation of such rules "is properly a matter of local concern", and noted that the American Bar Association and the American Law Institute had endorsed the "comment" practice.

Significance and criticism

In Mitchell v. United States (1999), the Court extended Griffin's no-comment rule to the sentencing phase of State trials.[7] Justice Scalia wrote in his dissent that Griffin "did not even pretend to be rooted in a historical understanding of the Fifth Amendment. Rather, in a breathtaking act of sorcery it simply transformed legislative policy into constitutional command", and that "To my mind, Griffin was a wrong turn – which is not cause enough to overrule it, but is cause enough to resist its extension." This dissent was joined by three other Justices, including Justice Thomas, who added in a separate dissent that Griffin "lacks foundation in the Constitution's text, history, or logic", and should be overruled outright.

A 1980 article in the Michigan Law Review stated that Griffin occurred "at the peak of [the Supreme Court's] enthusiasm to expand the constitutional protections of criminal defendants", and that it has "impaired the effective operation of the criminal justice system", automatically reversing cases where the defendant's silence is mentioned but being a "complete failure to address the much more common situation in which no comment is made by judge or prosecutor but the jury nonetheless concludes that the defendant is guilty because he has nothing to offer in his own defense."[8]

Great American Court Cases wrote that the Griffin ruling "preserved the presumption of innocence to which a defendant is constitutionally entitled."[citation needed]

The United Kingdom had a no-comment rule similar to that established in Griffin, but the rule was reversed in Northern Ireland in 1988 as a response to IRA terrorism, and later the reversal was extended to England and Wales.[9] Using this reversal as an argument, a 2007 article in the William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal argued that "Griffin's no-comment rule has never faced a challenge as daunting as that posed by modern domestic terrorism", and that it is currently "vulnerable" to reversal.[10]

Subsequent events in the case

After the U.S. Supreme Court's reversal of Griffin's conviction, he was tried again for murder, and a mistrial was declared when the jury was deadlocked 2 to 10 in favor of a second-degree murder conviction. In his third trial, the jury found Griffin guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced him to death. Upon automatic appeal (because of the jury's recommendation of the death penalty), the court reversed the trial court's judgment of conviction and of the imposition of the death penalty.[11]

References

  1. ^ Griffin v. California, 380 U.S. 609 (1965).
  2. ^ People v. Edward Dean Griffin, 66 Cal. 2d 459; 426 P.2d 507; 58 Cal. Rptr. 107; 1967 Cal. LEXIS 317 (Supreme Court of California April 25, 1967).
  3. ^ Knight, Alfred H. (1998). The Life of the Law. USA: Oxford University Press. p. 89. ISBN 978-0-19-512239-8.
  4. ^ Griffin, Lissa, p. 934.
  5. ^ a b Griffin, Lissa, p. 935.
  6. ^ Harlan, John Marshall II (1964). "Dissent, Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)". United States Supreme Court.
  7. ^ Griffin, Lissa (February 2007). "Is Silence Sacred? The Vulnerability of Griffin v. California in a Terrorist World". William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal. 15 (3): 928. Retrieved January 22, 2009.
  8. ^ Ayer, D B (May 1980). "Fifth Amendment and the Inference of Guilt from Silence Griffin v. California After Fifteen Years". Michigan Law Review. 78 (6): 841–871. doi:10.2307/1288343. JSTOR 1288343. S2CID 158973844. Retrieved January 22, 2009.
  9. ^ Griffin, Lissa, p. 950.
  10. ^ Griffin, Lissa, p. 961.
  11. ^ People v. Edward Dean Griffin, 66 Cal.2d 459 (April 25, 1967).

Read other articles:

Katedral EtchmiadzinAgamaAfiliasiGereja Apostolik ArmeniaRitusArmeniaKepemimpinanKatolik Seluruh ArmeniaStatusAktifLokasiLokasiVagharshapat, Provinsi Armavir, ArmeniaKoordinat40°09′42″N 44°17′28″E / 40.161769°N 44.291164°E / 40.161769; 44.291164Koordinat: 40°09′42″N 44°17′28″E / 40.161769°N 44.291164°E / 40.161769; 44.291164ArsitekturTipeKatedralGaya arsitekturArmeniaDibangun olehGregorius sang Iluminator (asli)Peletakan ...

 

AlojzovMunicipality BenderaLambang kebesaranAlojzovKoordinat: 49°25′24″N 17°2′29″E / 49.42333°N 17.04139°E / 49.42333; 17.04139Koordinat: 49°25′24″N 17°2′29″E / 49.42333°N 17.04139°E / 49.42333; 17.04139Country CekoRegionOlomoucDistrictProstějovLuas • Total4,64 km2 (179 sq mi)Ketinggian333 m (1,093 ft)Populasi • Total232 • Kepadatan0,50/km2 (1,3/sq mi...

 

Korean Air Penerbangan 801Ringkasan peristiwaTanggal6 Agustus 1997RingkasanMenabrak gunung disebabkan adanya malfungsi Glideslope disertai cuaca hujan yang derasLokasiBandar Udara Internasional Antonio B. Won Pat , GuamPenumpang237Awak17Cedera26Tewas229Selamat25Jenis pesawatBoeing 747-3B5OperatorKorean Air Korean Air Penerbangan 801 (KE801, KAL801) merupakan penerbangan penumpang berjadwal yang dioperasikan oleh Korean Air yang jatuh pada tanggal 6 Agustus 1997 di Bandar Udara Internasio...

Waterfall in Nunavut, Canada Middle of rapids Bloody Falls (or Bloody Fall, or Kogluktok, meaning it flows rapidly or spurts like a cut artery in Inuktitut)[1] is a waterfall on the Coppermine River, in the Kugluk/Bloody Falls Territorial Park of Nunavut, Canada. It was the site of the Bloody Falls Massacre in 1771 and the murder of two priests by Copper Inuit Uloqsaq and Sinnisiak in 1913.[2] The nearest hamlet, Kugluktuk, Nunavut, is 15.8 km (9.8 mi) away. Canoers'...

 

Mysterious characters from the Prose Edda High, Just-As-High, and Third converse with Gangleri. Art from an 18th-century Icelandic manuscript. Hár [ˈhɑːrː], Jafnhár [ˈjɑvnˌhɑːrː], and Þriði [ˈθriðe] (anglicized as Thridi)[a] are three men on thrones who appear in the Prose Edda in the Gylfaginning (The Beguiling of Gylfi), one of the oldest and most important sources on Norse mythology. Their names translate as High, Just-as-High, and Third in ...

 

Questa voce sull'argomento stagioni delle società calcistiche italiane è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Segui i suggerimenti del progetto di riferimento. Voce principale: Unione Sportiva Città di Pontedera. Unione Sportiva Città di PontederaStagione 2012-2013Sport calcio Squadra Pontedera Allenatore Paolo Indiani Presidente Gianfranco Donnini e Marcello Pantani Lega Pro Seconda Divisione2º posto nel girone B. Promosso in Prima ...

This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in French. (May 2020) Click [show] for important translation instructions. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translatio...

 

Kurdish internecine conflict (1994–1997) Iraqi Kurdish Civil WarPart of the Iraqi–Kurdish conflict and the Iraqi no-fly zones conflictMilitary situation in Iraqi Kurdistan after the conflictDate1 May 1994 – 24 November 1997[2]LocationIraqi Kurdistan (nominally northern Iraq)Result Washington Agreement PKK moved to Qandil mountains from Bekaa ValleyBelligerents KDP PDKISupported by: Iraq (from 1995) Turkey (from 1997) Iran (before 1995) PUK PKK[1]KCPIraqi Nation...

 

Irish political party Aontú LeaderPeadar TóibínDeputy leaderGemma BrollyFounded28 January 2019; 5 years ago (2019-01-28)Split fromSinn FéinHeadquarters8 Market Square, Navan, County MeathYouth wingÓgra AontúMembership (2023)1,300[1][non-primary source needed]IdeologyIrish republicanismSocial conservatismSloganLifeUnityEconomic JusticeDáil Éireann1 / 160Local government in the Republic of Ireland3 / 949Websiteaontu.iePolitics of the Republic of Ir...

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Kfar Qassem BS Club beach soccer – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Football clubFalfala Kfar Qassem BS ClubFull nameFalfala Kfar Qassem BS ClubNickname(s)Bnei Falfala (The sons of Falfa...

 

非常尊敬的讓·克雷蒂安Jean ChrétienPC OM CC KC  加拿大第20任總理任期1993年11月4日—2003年12月12日君主伊利沙伯二世总督Ray HnatyshynRoméo LeBlancAdrienne Clarkson副职Sheila Copps赫布·格雷John Manley前任金·坎貝爾继任保羅·馬田加拿大自由黨黨魁任期1990年6月23日—2003年11月14日前任約翰·特納继任保羅·馬田 高級政治職位 加拿大官方反對黨領袖任期1990年12月21日—1993年11月...

 

1926 American silent drama film La BohèmePromotional posterDirected byKing VidorWritten byFred de Gresac(screenplay)Harry BehnRay Doyle(continuity)William M. ConselmanRuth Cummings(titles)Based onScènes de la vie de bohème(1847–49) novelby Henri MurgerProduced byIrving ThalbergStarringLillian GishJohn GilbertCinematographyHendrik Sartov [fr]Edited byHugh WynnMusic byWilliam Axt (uncredited)David Mendoza (uncredited)Distributed byMetro-Goldwyn-MayerRelease date February ...

British singer-songwriter (born 1945) Roderick Stewart redirects here. For the politician, see Rory Stewart. SirRod StewartCBEStewart performing in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in August 2014BornRoderick David Stewart (1945-01-10) 10 January 1945 (age 79)Highgate, London, EnglandOther namesRod the ModOccupationsSingersongwriterrecord producermusicianYears active1961–presentSpouses Alana Collins ​ ​(m. 1979; div. 1984)​ Rachel Hunter &...

 

Звідки ми прийшли? Хто ми? Куди ми йдемо?D’où venons nous? Que sommes nous? Où allons nous? Творець: Поль ГогенЧас створення: 1897—1898Розміри: 139,1×374,6 смВисота: 139,1 смШирина: 374,6 смМатеріал: олія на полотніЖанр: побутовий жанрЗберігається: Бостон, СШАМузей: Бостонський музей образотворчого мис�...

 

American sociologist (1931–2015) This article is about the sociologist. For the toy executive, see Donald Levine. Donald N. LevineLevine in 2013BornDonald Nathan Levine(1931-06-16)June 16, 1931New Castle, Pennsylvania, U.S.DiedApril 4, 2015(2015-04-04) (aged 83)NationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of ChicagoKnown forContributions to Sociology, Sociological theory, Ethiopian StudiesScientific careerInstitutionsUniversity of ChicagoAcademic advisorsRobert Redfield, Richard M...

Doris Alexander RihiPotret resmi sebagai Penjabat Bupati Flores Timur Masa Jabatan 22 Mei 2022 - 22 Mei 2024. Penjabat Bupati Flores Timur ke-(6)PresidenJoko WidodoGubernur- Viktor Laiskodat - Ayodhia Gehak Lakunamang KalakePendahuluAntonius Hubertus Gege HadjonPenggantiSulastri H. I. Rasyid, S.Pi, M.SiMasa jabatan22 Mei 2022 – 22 Mei 2024Penjabat Bupati Sabu Raijua ke-(4)Masa jabatan27 Maret 2021 – 16 September 2021PresidenJoko WidodoGubernurViktor LaiskodatPend...

 

جواز سفر كوري جنوبيمعلومات عامةنوع المستند جواز سفرالغرض التعريف (هوية شخصية)تاريخ الإصدار 1948 (الإصدار الأول)[1] 25 أغسطس 2008[2] (جواز السفر الإلكتروني) 20 أبريل 2017[3] (جواز السفر مع كتابة برايل) 21 ديسمبر 2021[4] (الإصدار الحالي)صادر عن كوريا الجنوبيةصالح في كوريا الج...

 

Armenian-American actress Angela SarafyanSarafyan at the 2017 San Diego Comic-ConBornYerevan, Armenian SSR, Soviet UnionOther namesAngela SarafianOccupationActressYears active2000–present Angela Sarafyan (Armenian: Անժելա Սարաֆյան), sometimes credited as Angela Sarafian, is an Armenian-American actress. She has appeared as a guest star in several television series and has acted in the feature films: Kabluey (2007), On the Doll (2007), A Beautiful Life (2008), The Inf...

Jewish Holiday, Harvest Festival, Festival of Booths For the biblical location, see Sukkot (place). Ingathering redirects here. For the Ingathering of the Exiles (Kibbutz Galuyot), see Gathering of Israel. For the Zenna Henderson story collection, see Ingathering: The Complete People Stories. SukkotA sukkah (plural: sukkot) in the West BankOfficial nameHebrew: סוכות or סֻכּוֹת‎(Booths, Tabernacles)Observed byJews, Samaritans, Semitic NeopagansTypeJewish, SamaritanSignif...

 

Airline SAT Airlines IATA ICAO Callsign HZ SHU SATAIR Founded1992Ceased operations2013 (merged into Aurora (airline))HubsYuzhno-Sakhalinsk AirportFocus citiesKhabarovsk Novy AirportFleet size18Destinations15Parent companyAeroflotHeadquartersYuzhno-Sakhalinsk, RussiaKey people Konstantin Petrovich Sukhorebrik (General Director) Dr. Ahura Khaleghi Yazdi (Founder) OJSC SAT Airlines — Sakhalinskie Aviatrassy (Russian: Сахалинские Авиатрассы), commonly known as SAT Airlines,...