SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
RANDY WHITE, WARDEN v. ROGER L. WHEELER
on petition for writ of certiorari to the united states court of
appeals for the sixth circuit
No. 14–1372. Decided December 14, 2015
Per Curiam.
A death sentence imposed by a Kentucky trial court and affirmed
by the Kentucky Supreme Court has been overturned, on habeas corpus
review, by the Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. During the
jury selection process, the state trial court excused a juror after
concluding he could not give sufficient assurance of neutrality or
impartiality in considering whether the death penalty should be
imposed. The Court of Appeals, despite the substantial deference it
must accord to state-court rulings in federal habeas proceedings,
determined that excusing the juror in the circumstances of this
case violated the Sixth and Fourteenth Amendments. That ruling
contravenes controlling precedents from this Court, and it is now
necessary to reverse the Court of Appeals by this summary
disposition.
Warden Randy White is the petitioner here, and the convicted
prisoner, Roger Wheeler, is the respondent.
In October 1997, police in Louisville, Kentucky, found the
bodies of Nigel Malone and Nairobi Warfield in the apartment the
couple shared. Malone had been stabbed nine times. Warfield had
been strangled to death and a pair of scissors stuck out from her
neck. She was pregnant. DNA taken from blood at the crime scene
matched respondent’s. Respondent was charged with the murders.
During voir dire, Juror 638 gave equivocal and
inconsistent answers when questioned about whether he could
consider voting to impose the death penalty. In response to the
judge’s questions about his personal beliefs on the death penalty,
Juror 638 said, “I’m not sure that I have formed an opinion one way
or the other. I believe there are arguments on both sides of the—of
it.” App. to Pet. for Cert. 126a. When asked by the prosecution
about his ability to consider all available penalties, Juror 638
noted he had “never been confronted with that situation in a, in a
real-life sense of having to make that kind of determination.”
Id., at 131a. “So it’s difficult for me,” he explained, “to
judge how I would I guess act, uh.” Ibid. The prosecution
sought to clarify Juror 638’s answer, asking if the juror meant he
was “not absolutely certain whether [he] could realistically
consider” the death penalty. Id., at 132a. Juror 638
replied, “I think that would be the most accurate way I could
answer your question.” Ibid. During defense counsel’s
examination, Juror 638 described himself as “a bit more
contemplative on the issue of taking a life and, uh, whether or not
we have the right to take that life.” Id., at 133a. Later,
however, he expressed his belief that he could consider all the
penalty options. Id., at 134a.
The prosecution moved to strike Juror 638 for cause based on his
inconsistent replies, as illustrated by his statement that he was
not absolutely certain he could realistically consider the death
penalty. The defense opposed the motion, arguing that Juror 638’s
answers indicated his ability to consider all the penalty options,
despite having some reservations about the death penalty. The judge
said that when she was done questioning Juror 638, she wrote in her
notes that the juror “ ‘could consider [the] entire range’ ” of
penalties. Id., at 138a. She further stated that she did not
“see him as problematic” at the end of her examination.
Ibid. But she also noted that she did not “hear him say that
he couldn’t realistically consider the death penalty,” and reserved
ruling on the motion until she could review Juror 638’s testimony.
Ibid. The next day, after reviewing the relevant testimony,
the judge struck Juror 638 for cause. When she announced her
decision to excuse the juror, the trial judge stated, “And when I
went back and reviewed [the juror’s] entire testimony, [the
prosecution] concluded with saying, ‘Would it be accurate to say
that you couldn’t, couldn’t consider the entire range?’ And his
response is—I think was, ‘I think that would be pretty accurate.’
So, I’m going to sustain that one, too.” Id., at
139a–140a.
The case proceeded to trial. Respondent was convicted of both
murders and sentenced to death. The Kentucky Supreme Court affirmed
the convictions and the sentence. Wheeler v.
Commonwealth, 121 S. W. 3d 173, 189 (2003). In considering
respondent’s challenges to the trial court’s excusal of certain
jurors for cause, the Kentucky Supreme Court held that the trial
judge “appropriately struck for cause those jurors that could not
impose the death pen-alty. . . . There was no error and the rights
of the defendant to a fair trial by a fair and impartial jury . . .
under both the federal and state constitutions were not violated.”
Id., at 179.
After exhausting available state postconviction procedures,
respondent sought a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U. S. C. §2254
from the United States District Court for the Western District of
Kentucky. He asserted, inter alia, that the Kentucky trial
court erred in striking Juror 638 during voir dire on the
ground that the juror could not give assurances that he could
consider the death penalty as a sentencing option. The District
Court dismissed the petition; but a divided panel of the Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed, granting habeas relief as
to respondent’s sentence. Wheeler v. Simpson, 779 F.
3d 366, 379 (2015). While acknowledging the deferential standard
required on federal habeas review of a state conviction, the Court
of Appeals held that allowing the exclusion of Juror 638 was an
unreasonable application of Witherspoon v. Illinois,
391 U. S. 510 (1968) , Wainwright v. Witt, 469 U. S.
412 (1985) , and their progeny. 779 F. 3d, at 372–374.
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
(AEDPA), habeas relief is authorized if the state court’s decision
“was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of,
clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court
of the United States.” 28 U. S. C. §2254(d)(1). This Court, time
and again, has instructed that AEDPA, by setting forth necessary
predicates before state-court judgments may be set aside, “erects a
formidable barrier to federal habeas relief for prisoners whose
claims have been adjudicated in state court.” Burt v.
Titlow, 571 U. S. ___, ___ (2013) (slip op., at 6). Under
§2254(d)(1), “ ‘a state prisoner must show that the state court’s
ruling on the claim being presented in federal court was so lacking
in justification that there was an error well understood and
comprehended in existing law beyond any possibility for fairminded
disagreement.’ ” White v. Woodall, 572 U. S. ___, ___
(2014) (slip op., at 4) (quoting Harrington v.
Richter, 562 U. S. 86, 103 (2011) ).
The Court of Appeals was required to apply this deferential
standard to the state court’s analysis of respondent’s juror
exclusion claim. In Witherspoon, this Court set forth the
rule for juror disqualification in capital cases.
Witherspoon recognized that the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee
of an impartial jury confers on capital defendants the right to a
jury not “uncommonly willing to condemn a man to die.” 391 U. S.,
at 521. But the Court with equal clarity has acknowledged the
State’s “strong interest in having jurors who are able to apply
capital punishment within the framework state law prescribes.”
Uttecht v. Brown, 551 U. S. 1, 9 (2007) . To ensure
the proper balance between these two interests, only “a juror who
is substantially impaired in his or her ability to impose the death
penalty under the state-law framework can be excused for cause.”
Ibid. As the Court explained in Witt, a juror may be
excused for cause “where the trial judge is left with the definite
impression that a prospective juror would be unable to faithfully
and impartially apply the law.” 469 U. S., at 425–426.
Reviewing courts owe deference to a trial court’s ruling on
whether to strike a particular juror “regardless of whether the
trial court engages in explicit analysis regarding substantial
impairment; even the granting of a motion to excuse for cause
constitutes an implicit finding of bias.” Uttecht, 551 U.
S., at 7. A trial court’s “finding may be upheld even in the
absence of clear statements from the juror that he or she is
impaired . . . .” Ibid. And where, as here, the federal
courts review a state-court ruling under the constraints imposed by
AEDPA, the federal court must accord an additional and
“independent, high standard” of deference. Id., at 10. As a
result, federal habeas reviewof a Witherspoon-Witt
claim—much like federal habeas review of an
ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim—must be “ ‘ “doubly
deferential.” ’ ” Burt, supra, at ___ (slip op., at
1) (quoting Cullen v. Pinholster, 563 U. S. 170, 190
(2011) ).
The Court of Appeals held that the Kentucky Supreme Court
unreasonably applied Witherspoon, Witt, and their
progeny when it determined that removing Juror 638 for cause was
constitutional. 779 F. 3d, at 372–374. The Court of Appeals
determined Juror 638 “understood the decisions he would face and
engaged with them in a thoughtful, honest, and conscientious
manner.” Id., at 373. In the Court of Appeals’ estimation,
the trial judge concluded the juror was not qualified only by
“misapprehending a single question and answer exchange” between
Juror 638 and the prosecution, id., at 374—the exchange in
which Juror 638 stated he was not absolutely certain he could
realistically consider the death penalty, id., at 372.
According to the Court of Appeals, Juror 638 “agreed he did not
know to an absolute certainty whether he could realistically
consider the death penalty, but the court proceeded as if he
knew he could not.” Ibid. The Court of Appeals further
determined that if the trial judge, when reviewing Juror 638’s
examination, had “properly processed that exchange” between Juror
638 and the prosecution, Juror 638 would not have been excused.
Id., at 374.
Both the analysis and the conclusion in the decision under
review were incorrect. While the Court of Appeals acknowledged that
deference was required under AEDPA, it failed to ask the critical
question: Was the Kentucky Supreme Court’s decision to affirm the
excusal of Juror 638 for cause “ ‘so lacking in justification that
there was an error well understood and comprehended in existing law
beyond any possibility for fairminded disagreement’ ”?
Woodall, supra, at ___ (slip op., at 4) (quoting
Harrington, supra, at 103).
The Court of Appeals did not properly apply the deference it was
required to accord the state-court ruling. A fairminded jurist
could readily conclude that the trial judge’s exchange with Juror
638 reflected a “diligent and thoughtful voir dire”; that
she considered with care the juror’s testimony; and that she was
fair in the exercise of her “broad discretion” in determining
whether the juror was qualified to serve in this capital case.
Uttecht, 551 U. S., at 20. Juror 638’s answers during
voir dire were at least ambiguous as to whether he would be
able to give appropriate consideration to imposing the death
penalty. And as this Court made clear in Uttecht, “when
there is ambiguity in the prospective juror’s statements,” the
trial court is “ ‘entitled to resolve it in favor of the State.’ ”
Id., at 7 (quoting Witt, supra, at 434).
The Court of Appeals erred in its assessment of the trial
judge’s reformulation of an important part of Juror 638’s
questioning. 779 F. 3d, at 372. When excusing the juror the day
after the voir dire, the trial judge said that the
prosecution had asked whether the juror “couldn’t con-sider the
entire range” of penalties. App. to Pet. for Cert. 139a. The
prosecution in fact asked if the juror was “not absolutely certain
whether [he] could realistically con-sider” the entire range of
penalties. Id., at 132a. The juror’s confirmation that he
was “not absolutely certain whether [he] could realistically
consider” the death penalty, ibid., was a reasonable basis
for the trial judge to conclude that the juror was unable to give
that penalty fair consideration. The trial judge’s decision to
excuse Juror 638 did not violate clearly established federal law by
concluding that Juror 638 was not qualified to serve as a member
ofthis capital jury. See Witt, supra, at 424–426. And
similarly, the Kentucky Supreme Court’s ruling that therewas no
error is not beyond any possibility for fairminded
disagreement.
The Court of Appeals noted that the deference toward trial
courts recognized in Uttecht “was largely premised on the
trial judge’s ability to ‘observe the demeanor of’ ” the juror. 779
F. 3d, at 373 (quoting 551 U. S., at 17). It concluded that
deference to the trial court here supported habeas relief, because
the trial judge’s “initial assessment of [the juror’s] answers and
demeanor” did not lead her to immediately strike Juror 638 for
cause. 779 F. 3d, at 373–374.
The Court of Appeals’ conclusion conflicts with the meaning and
holding of Uttecht and with a common-sense understanding of
the jury selection process. Nothing in Uttecht limits the
trial court to evaluating demeanor alone and not the substance of a
juror’s response. And the implicit suggestion that a trial judge is
entitled to less deference for having deliberated after her initial
ruling is wrong. In the ordinary case the conclusion should be
quite the opposite. It is true that a trial court’s contemporaneous
assessment of a juror’s demeanor, and its bearing on how to
interpret or understand the juror’s responses, are entitled to
substantial deference; but a trial court ruling is likewise
entitled to deference when made after a careful review of a formal
transcript or recording. If the trial judge chooses to reflect and
deliberate further, as this trial judge did after the proceedings
recessed for the day, that is not to be faulted; it is to be
commended.
This is not a case where “the record discloses no basis for a
finding of substantial impairment.” Uttecht, supra,
at 20. The two federal judges in the majority below might
have reached a different conclusion had they been presiding over
this voir dire. But simple disagreement does not overcome
the two layers of deference owed by a federal habeas court in this
context.
* * *
The Kentucky Supreme Court was not unreasonable in its
application of clearly established federal law when it concluded
that the exclusion of Juror 638 did not violate the Sixth
Amendment. Given this conclusion, there is no need to consider
petitioner’s further contention that, if there were an error by the
trial court in excluding the juror, it should be subject to
harmless-error analysis. And this Court does not review the other
rulings of the Court of Appeals that are not addressed in this
opinion.
As a final matter, this Court again advises the Court of Appeals
that the provisions of AEDPA apply with full force even when
reviewing a conviction and sentence imposing the death penalty.
See, e.g., Parker v. Matthews, 567 U. S. ___
(2012) (per curiam); Bobby v. Dixon, 565 U. S.
___ (2011) (per curiam); Bobby v. Mitts, 563
U. S. 395 (2011) (per curiam); Bobby v. Van
Hook, 558 U. S. 4 (2009) (per curiam).
The petition for certiorari and respondent’s motion to proceed
in forma pauperis are granted. The judgment of the Court of
Appeals for the Sixth Circuit is reversed, and the case is remanded
for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.