United States v. Tanisha Banks ( 2020 )


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  •                               In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 19-3245
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    TANISHA A. BANKS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division.
    No. 2:18CR61-3 — Theresa L. Springmann, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED SEPTEMBER 22, 2020 — DECIDED DECEMBER 18, 2020
    ____________________
    Before SYKES, Chief Judge, and FLAUM and ROVNER, Circuit
    Judges.
    SYKES, Chief Judge. Tanisha Banks was indicted on charges
    of conspiracy and aiding and abetting a robbery of the
    United States Post Office in Gary, Indiana, where she
    worked as a mail clerk. See 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 371
    , 2114(a). After a
    five-day trial and four hours of deliberation that stretched to
    about 8:45 p.m., the jury returned a verdict of guilty on both
    counts.
    2                                                 No. 19-3245
    At the request of Banks’s counsel, the judge polled the
    jurors. See FED. R. CRIM. P. 31(d). The first four affirmed the
    verdict. The fifth did not. When asked whether the guilty
    verdict was in fact his verdict, Juror 32 responded, “Forced
    into.” The judge repeated the question. Juror 32 responded
    that he needed more time. The judge continued the poll, and
    the remaining jurors affirmed the verdict, singling out
    Juror 32 as the lone dissenter. The judge then instructed the
    jurors to continue deliberating and sent them back to the
    jury room at 9:06 p.m. Twenty-nine minutes later, the jury
    again returned a guilty verdict. This time the poll confirmed
    a unanimous decision.
    Banks raises several issues on appeal, but her main ar-
    gument concerns the circumstances surrounding the jury
    poll, which she contends exerted impermissible pressure on
    the wavering juror. We agree. The totality of the circum-
    stances—most notably, the dissenting juror’s troubling
    responses to the poll questions, the judge’s decision to
    complete the poll notwithstanding the juror’s dissent, the
    lateness of the hour, and the extreme brevity of the jury’s
    renewed deliberations—were unacceptably coercive. We
    vacate the judgment and remand for a new trial.
    I. Background
    On August 3, 2017, a masked man with a gun robbed the
    United States Post Office in Gary’s Tolleston neighborhood,
    absconding with almost $6,000 in cash. According to the
    evidence presented at trial, the robbery was the culmination
    of a scheme hatched a few days earlier by Banks, who
    worked as a mail clerk at the Tolleston branch, and James
    Caffey, her boyfriend. They desperately needed money—
    they had less than $700 between them and were delinquent
    No. 19-3245                                                 3
    on rent and car payments—so they recruited their friend
    Leeroy Beck and set the robbery plan in motion. Banks
    provided information about the layout of the post office and
    its closing procedures. Caffey supplied a mask and a
    9mm handgun and was the getaway driver. Beck committed
    the robbery using Caffey’s gun.
    A grand jury indicted Banks, Caffey, and Beck on charges
    of conspiracy to rob a post office, 
    18 U.S.C. § 371
    , and rob-
    bing or aiding and abetting the robbery of mail, money, or
    property of the United States, 
    id.
     § 2114(a). The indictment
    also charged Beck and Caffey with brandishing and aiding
    and abetting the brandishing of a firearm during a crime of
    violence. Id. § 924(c)(1)(A). Beck pleaded guilty to the fire-
    arm count and agreed to testify for the government.
    The case against Banks and Caffey proceeded to trial,
    which spanned five days and featured testimony from Beck
    and the government’s lead investigator, among other evi-
    dence. The investigator’s testimony included statements
    from several witness interviews, prompting hearsay objec-
    tions from the defense. The objections were overruled and
    Banks challenges those rulings on appeal. We can omit the
    details because the juror-coercion issue resolves the appeal
    in Banks’s favor, so there’s no need to address the hearsay
    objections. Banks also challenges Beck’s testimony as incred-
    ible as a matter of law, but again we have no need to address
    that issue. We focus our attention on the circumstances
    surrounding the jury’s deliberations, the jury poll, and the
    aftermath of Juror 32’s dissent.
    Before submitting the case to the jury, the judge gave this
    instruction regarding the requirement of a unanimous
    verdict:
    4                                                 No. 19-3245
    The verdict must represent the considered
    judgment of each juror. Your verdict, whether
    it is guilty or not guilty, must be unanimous.
    You should make every reasonable effort to
    reach a verdict. In doing so, you should consult
    with each other, express your own views and
    listen to your fellow jurors’ opinions[.]
    [D]iscuss your differences with an open
    mind[.] [D]o not hesitate to re-examine your
    own view and change your opinion if you
    come to believe it is wrong. But you should not
    surrender your honest beliefs about the weight
    or effect of evidence just because [of] the opin-
    ions of your fellow jurors or just so that there
    could be a unanimous verdict.
    The jurors retired to deliberate at 4:45 p.m. Four hours later
    they returned to the courtroom and announced a verdict
    finding both defendants guilty of conspiracy and aiding and
    abetting the robbery, and acquitting Caffey on the firearm
    charge.
    Banks’s counsel asked the judge to poll the jury. The
    judge asked each juror individually, “[I]s this your verdict as
    to Ms. Banks?” The first four jurors responded, “Yes.” When
    the next juror was polled, the following colloquy ensued:
    THE COURT:    Juror No. 32, is this your ver-
    dict as to Ms. Banks?
    JUROR NO. 32: Forced into.
    THE COURT: Is this your verdict?
    JUROR NO. 32: I suppose so.
    No. 19-3245                                                  5
    THE COURT:    Is it your verdict that she is
    guilty on both Counts One
    and Two?
    JUROR NO. 32: I don’t know how to answer
    that.
    THE COURT: I’m asking you to answer that
    at this time.
    JUROR NO. 32: I feel like I need more time.
    THE COURT: Let me go finish the poll, and
    then I’ll come back to you.
    The judge polled the remaining jurors, and each affirmed the
    verdict.
    The judge then called a sidebar with counsel and noted
    that the verdict did not sound unanimous. Defense counsel
    agreed. The government added, “I think we have to send
    them back.” Caffey’s counsel asked the judge to poll the jury
    regarding the verdict on the counts against Caffey. The
    judge did so. All jurors affirmed the verdict as to Caffey, and
    the court accepted it.
    The judge then returned to the unanimity problem in the
    verdict against Banks and sent the jurors back to the jury
    room to continue deliberating with this instruction:
    At this time, ladies and gentlemen of the jury,
    because the verdict that you have returned …
    with regard to Ms. Tanisha Banks does not ap-
    pear to be unanimous given the polling of the
    jury, the [c]ourt is going to direct that you re-
    turn to your deliberations with regard to
    Ms. Banks at this time—it’s about five minutes
    after 9:00—and to continue your best, good
    6                                                    No. 19-3245
    faith efforts in doing so to attempt to come to a
    unanimous verdict with regard to Ms. Banks.
    The judge asked if counsel had anything to add regarding
    this instruction and counsel declined.
    Deliberations resumed at 9:06 p.m. Just 29 minutes later,
    the jury returned a verdict finding Banks guilty on both
    counts. The judge again polled the jury, and this time all
    jurors confirmed that the verdict was unanimous.
    II. Discussion
    “Any criminal defendant … being tried by a jury is enti-
    tled to the uncoerced verdict of that body.” Lowenfield v.
    Phelps, 
    484 U.S. 231
    , 241 (1988). Impermissible coercion
    occurs “when jurors surrender their honest opinions for the
    mere purpose of returning a verdict.” United States v.
    Williams, 
    819 F.3d 1026
    , 1030 (7th Cir. 2016) (quotation marks
    omitted). We assess the risk of juror coercion based on the
    totality of the circumstances from the juror’s perspective. 
    Id.
    The inquiry is objective and focuses on “the situation facing
    the juror”; the subjective intent of the judge and the juror are
    irrelevant. Id.; accord United States v. Blitch, 
    622 F.3d 658
    , 668
    (7th Cir. 2010).
    Banks did not object to the judge’s approach to Juror 32,
    so we review the claim of impermissible coercion for plain
    error. FED. R. CRIM. P. 52(b). Under the plain-error standard,
    the defendant ordinarily must establish that an “obvious”
    error occurred that affected his substantial rights and seri-
    ously affected the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of
    the judicial proceedings. United States v. Triggs, 
    963 F.3d 710
    ,
    714 (7th Cir. 2020). But juror coercion, if it occurs, is a grave
    error. Jenkins v. United States, 
    380 U.S. 445
    , 446 (1965) (per
    No. 19-3245                                                  7
    curiam) (“[T]he principle that jurors may not be coerced into
    surrendering views conscientiously held is so clear as to
    require no elaboration.” (quotation marks omitted)). Accord-
    ingly, if the totality of the circumstances presents a clear
    impermissible risk of juror coercion, we presume that the
    error prejudiced the defendant and seriously affected the
    fairness of the proceedings. Williams, 819 F.3d at 1031.
    We begin with the circumstance most indicative of coer-
    cion: the dialogue between the judge and Juror 32. Juror 32’s
    initial response to the judge’s polling question was startling.
    When the judge asked if the guilty verdict against Banks
    was, in fact, his verdict, he replied with two striking words:
    “Forced into.” This was far more than a simple “no.” Indeed,
    the words “forced into” amount to Juror 32 telling the court
    that he was coerced into the verdict.
    To be clear, we do not hold that this response alone ne-
    cessitated a mistrial. The rules of procedure give the trial
    judge the discretion to either mistry the case or order further
    deliberation when the jury poll reveals a lack of unanimity.
    See FED. R. CRIM. P. 31(d). But Juror 32’s response was alarm-
    ing enough that an immediate sidebar with counsel was
    warranted.
    Instead, the judge asked several follow-up questions that
    only pressed Juror 32 further. Those questions and answers
    did little to lessen the pressure at the time, and they do
    nothing to assuage our concerns now. After Juror 32 said,
    “Forced into,” the judge again asked him, “Is this your
    verdict?” And he responded, “I suppose so.” The govern-
    ment characterizes this response as suggesting that Juror 32
    agreed with the guilty finding. That hardly seems the case.
    At best, “I suppose so” suggests that Juror 32 is unsure of his
    8                                                  No. 19-3245
    verdict. At worst, it implies he is giving up—“surrender[ing
    his] honest opinions for the mere purpose of returning a
    verdict.” Blitch, 
    622 F.3d at 668
     (quotation marks omitted).
    Either way, “I suppose so” certainly does not convey affir-
    mance of the verdict. When asked a third time, Juror 32 said,
    “I don’t know how to answer that.” We do not need to
    speculate about the implications of this answer. The purpose
    of a jury poll is to confirm unanimity, Williams, 819 F.3d at
    1031, and this response decidedly did not do that.
    More concerning is the judge’s next request: “I’m asking
    you to answer that at this time.” The government argues that
    this was a neutral inquiry intended only to clear up the
    uncertainty in Juror 32’s responses. We see it differently. By
    this time there was no uncertainty about Juror 32’s position.
    He had already said he was “forced into” the verdict, and he
    did not retreat from that position when asked two more
    times. Whether the judge intended to merely clear up the
    uncertainty is irrelevant. Our inquiry focuses on the juror’s
    perspective. Id. at 1030. Viewed through that lens, continu-
    ing to press Juror 32 for a different answer was unnecessari-
    ly coercive.
    The way in which the judge conducted the jury poll also
    informs our analysis. Although criminal defendants are
    entitled to poll the jury, the judge must conduct the poll in a
    manner that minimizes its coercive effect. Id. at 1031. Banks
    argues that the judge’s decision to complete the poll after
    Juror 32 rejected the verdict unduly increased the pressure
    on him by revealing him as the lone dissenter.
    Continuing to poll the jury after one juror disagrees with
    the verdict does not automatically amount to reversible
    coercion. United States v. Carraway, 
    108 F.3d 745
    , 751 (7th Cir.
    No. 19-3245                                                     9
    1997); see also Williams, 819 F.3d at 1032 n.2 (collecting out-of-
    circuit cases). After all, the purpose of polling is to “ferret
    out” dissenting jurors, Lyell v. Renico, 
    470 F.3d 1177
    , 1184
    (6th Cir. 2006), and polling always risks revealing a lone
    holdout because the last juror to be polled could reject the
    verdict after the first 11 affirm it, Williams, 819 F.3d at 1031.
    Revealing the jury’s numerical division through polling
    therefore does not equate to inquiring into the numerical
    division of a deadlocked jury—a per se reversible error. See
    Brasfield v. United States, 
    272 U.S. 448
    , 450 (1926); Lyell,
    
    470 F.3d at
    1183–84 (emphasizing the differences between a
    jury poll and an inquiry into the jury’s division).
    But our decision in Williams also recognized that contin-
    ued polling in this situation is relevant to the coercion
    inquiry because it undoubtedly puts pressure on the holdout
    juror. 819 F.3d at 1032–33. In most cases there is “little point
    to continuing to poll … because one holdout suffices to send
    the jury back to deliberate.” Lyell, 
    470 F.3d at 1183
    . That is
    why we have endorsed the “wise” approach of terminating
    the poll as soon as a lack of unanimity is revealed. Williams,
    819 F.3d at 1032 & n.3. Doing so avoids revealing the num-
    ber and identity of any dissenting jurors, reducing the poll’s
    coercive effect.
    The judge here did not follow that advice. Had she done
    so, no one (save for the other jurors) would know whether
    Juror 32 was alone in his disagreement or one of several
    dissenters. We do not mean to suggest that the judge intend-
    ed to pressure Juror 32; quite the contrary, we are confident
    that she did not. But her intent is immaterial. What matters
    is whether the manner in which the judge conducted the poll
    10                                                 No. 19-3245
    unnecessarily risked coercion. Id. at 1033. We conclude that
    it did.
    The government argues that the risk of coercion attribut-
    able to the jury poll is less here than it was in Williams.
    There, a juror answered “no” when asked if the guilty
    verdict was indeed her verdict. Id. at 1028. But the judge
    apparently did not hear the juror’s response and simply
    continued with the poll—revealing the dissenter as the lone
    holdout—and then dismissed the jury, believing the verdict
    was unanimous. Id. When counsel brought the issue to the
    judge’s attention, he polled the jury a second time. We held
    that these “additional coercive actions” rendered the contin-
    ued polling an obvious error. Id. at 1032–33 (emphasis
    omitted).
    By contrast, here the judge polled the jury only once and
    did not inadvertently dismiss the jury after the first poll. The
    government emphasizes this distinction, but it’s not disposi-
    tive. We assess juror coercion based on the totality of the
    circumstances, and the jury poll is only one factor in that
    inquiry.
    The use of a supplemental instruction after a jury poll re-
    veals division can help guard against an impermissibly
    coercive atmosphere. We have not mandated a specific jury
    instruction in this situation, id. at 1034, and we do not do so
    today. But a robust cautionary instruction can lessen the
    pressure on a dissenting juror. Williams emphasizes the
    importance of reminding jurors “not to surrender their
    honest beliefs” just to reach a unanimous verdict. Id.
    The judge’s supplemental instruction lacked this im-
    portant reminder. To be sure, the judge did ask the jury to
    No. 19-3245                                                  11
    continue deliberating in “good faith.” But the heart of the
    coercion inquiry is whether a juror “surrender[s his] honest
    opinions for the mere purpose of returning a verdict.” Blitch,
    
    622 F.3d at 668
     (quotation marks omitted). That’s why the
    so-called Silvern charge—the instruction given to a dead-
    locked jury in this circuit—reminds jurors not to “surrender
    [their] honest beliefs about the weight or effect of evidence
    just because of the opinions of [their] fellow jurors or just so
    that there can be a unanimous verdict.” Pattern Criminal Jury
    Instructions of the Seventh Circuit No. 7.03 (2020). The likeli-
    hood of coercion would have been diminished had the
    judge’s supplemental instruction included this important
    warning.
    The government argues that because the judge gave the
    Silvern charge with the general instructions before the jury
    commenced deliberations, she did not need to do so again.
    This argument misses the point. The supplemental instruc-
    tion comes “at a very sensitive moment—immediately after
    [a juror is] identified as the lone dissenter.” Williams,
    819 F.3d at 1033. Cautioning jurors at that moment that they
    should not surrender their honest beliefs for the sake of
    reaching a unanimous verdict goes a long way toward
    mitigating the risk of impermissible coercion.
    The timing of the judge’s instruction to continue deliber-
    ating also increased the likelihood of coercion. The jurors
    reached a verdict at about 8:45 p.m., after listening to hours
    of closing argument at the conclusion of a five-day trial and
    deliberating for about four hours. After the first poll re-
    vealed a dissenting juror, the judge returned the jurors to the
    jury room at 9:06 p.m. with an instruction to continue delib-
    erations. Having just been identified as the lone holdout,
    12                                                   No. 19-3245
    Juror 32 no doubt well understood that he was the only
    person preventing his fellow jurors, the attorneys, and the
    judge from going home for the night. Under those circum-
    stances any dissenting juror would have felt pressure to
    surrender his beliefs. See United States v. Fiorilla, 
    850 F.2d 172
    ,
    176–77 (3d Cir. 1988) (noting the judge’s decision to dismiss
    the jury for the day after a jury poll revealed a lone dissenter
    lessened the risk of coercion by “remov[ing the dissenting
    juror] from the immediate ‘attacks’ of his peers”); cf. Blitch,
    
    622 F.3d at
    670–71 (holding that the court’s instruction to
    continue deliberating given around the time the court had
    earlier promised the jury they would be able to leave for the
    day was unduly coercive).
    We conclude with a few words about the length of the
    jury’s renewed deliberations. A verdict returned very quick-
    ly after the jury is given a supplemental instruction to con-
    tinue deliberations may signal that a juror was coerced.
    Lowenfield, 
    484 U.S. at 240
    ; Williams, 819 F.3d at 1034. While
    longer deliberations indicate the jurors took time to “reex-
    amine [their] own views” and “consult with one another,”
    United States v. Silvern, 
    484 F.2d 879
    , 883 (7th Cir. 1973) (en
    banc), shorter deliberations may support an inference of a
    “coercive effect of the majority running roughshod over the
    minority,” United States v. De Stefano, 
    476 F.2d 324
    , 337 (7th
    Cir. 1973).
    The circumstances support the latter inference here. The
    jury returned its second verdict against Banks just
    29 minutes after being instructed to continue deliberating.
    That rapid turnaround suggests that Juror 32 may have felt
    pressured into surrendering his views for the sole purpose
    of returning a unanimous verdict.
    No. 19-3245                                                13
    The government points to cases involving shorter delib-
    erations in which the court held that there was no coercion.
    See Amos v. United States, 
    496 F.2d 1269
    , 1272–73 (8th Cir.
    1974) (25 minutes); United States v. Brooks, 
    420 F.2d 1350
    ,
    1354 (D.C. Cir. 1969) (20 minutes). But neither Amos nor
    Brooks expressly considered the deliberation time in their
    analyses. In contrast, the Supreme Court in Lowenfield explic-
    itly recognized that a 30-minute supplemental deliberation
    “suggests the possibility of coercion.” 
    484 U.S. at 235, 240
    .
    We likewise conclude that the 29-minute deliberation sug-
    gests impermissible coercion.
    III. Conclusion
    The totality of the circumstances here created a clear and
    obvious risk of juror coercion. Juror 32’s “forced into” re-
    sponse to the poll question is powerful evidence of imper-
    missible coercion. And the circumstances that followed—the
    judge’s repeated pressing for another answer, the incom-
    plete cautionary instruction, the late hour, and the brief
    duration of the renewed deliberations—only amplify our
    concern. Because the risk of juror coercion was clear and
    obvious, we presume that the error prejudiced Banks and
    seriously affected the fairness of the proceedings. Williams,
    819 F.3d at 1031. The judgment must be vacated.
    VACATED AND REMANDED