WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court Thursday limited the Constitution’s protection against double jeopardy in cases involving multiple charges and deadlocked juries.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court Thursday limited the Constitution’s protection against double jeopardy in cases involving multiple charges and deadlocked juries.
The 6-3 decision holds that a jury’s unanimous but tentative vote to acquit a defendant on some charges does not count as a verdict.
It came in the case of an Arkansas man who in 2009 was tried for murder and manslaughter in the death of his girlfriend’s 1-year-old baby. The jury voted unanimously against the murder charge, but the foreman said they were “hopelessly deadlocked” on whether he was guilty of manslaughter. The judge declared a mistrial.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts, writing for the court majority, said the constitutional protection against being tried more than once for the same crime did not prevent the man from being retried for murder. Only a “final decision” of the jury and a “formal verdict” triggers the double jeopardy protection. A jury foreman’s report on the deliberations does not count as a verdict, he said.
The ruling means Alex Blueford can be retried for murder as well as manslaughter and negligent homicide in the death of the baby. Prosecutors said Blueford threw the child to the floor. He said the child fell in an accident.
Blueford argued in his appeal to the Supreme Court the state’s plan to retry him for murder violated his Fifth Amendment protection against being “twice put in jeopardy of life or limb … for the same offense.” He agreed he could be tried again for manslaughter and negligent homicide.
Lawyers involved in the case doubted the ruling would have a broad impact. In most states, trial judges can poll jurors who are having trouble reaching a verdict and issue a partial verdict on those charges where they are unanimous. Once the jury and judge reach a verdict on some charges, a defendant could not be retried for those same offenses.
The trial judge in Blueford’s case could have polled the jurors and issued a partial verdict acquitting him on the murder counts, but he chose to allow the deliberations to continue.
In Blueford v. Arkansas, Roberts agreed with the state that jurors can change their minds during deliberations.
“The jury in this case did not convict Blueford of any offense, but it did not acquit him of any either,” Roberts said. “As a consequence, the double jeopardy clause does not stand in the way of a second trial on the same offenses.”