Footnotes
[Footnote 1] Sheppard was convicted in 1954 in the Court of
Common Pleas of Cuyahoga County, Ohio. His conviction was affirmed
by the Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga County, 100 Ohio App. 345, 128
N. E. 2d 471 (1955), and the Ohio Supreme Court, 165 Ohio St. 293,
135 N. E. 2d 340 (1956). We denied certiorari on the original
application for review. 352 U.S. 910 (1956).
[Footnote 2] The several witnesses to whom Sheppard narrated his
experiences differ in their description of various details. Sheppard
claimed the vagueness of his perception was caused by his sudden
awakening, the dimness of the light, and his loss of consciousness.
[Footnote 3] Sheppard was suffering from severe pain in his neck,
a swollen eye, and shock.
[Footnote 4] But newspaper photographers and reporters were
permitted access to Sheppard's home from time to time and took
pictures throughout the premises.
[Footnote 5] At the same time, the newspapers reported that other
possible suspects had been "cleared" by lie detector
tests. One of these persons was quoted as saying that he could not
understand why an innocent man would refuse to take such a test.
[Footnote 6] The newspapers had heavily emphasized Sheppard's
illicit affair with Susan Hayes, and the fact that he had initially
lied about it.
[Footnote 7] A number of articles calculated to evoke sympathy
for Sheppard were printed, such as the letters Sheppard wrote to his
son while in jail. These stories often appeared together with news
coverage which was unfavorable to him.
[Footnote 8] Many more reporters and photographers attended the
Sheppard trial. And it attracted several nationally famous
commentators as well.
[Footnote 9] At the commencement of trial, defense counsel made
motions for continuance and change of venue. The judge postponed
ruling on these motions until he determined whether an impartial
jury could be impaneled. Voir dire examination showed that with one
exception all members selected for jury service had read something
about the case in the newspapers. Since, however, all of the jurors
stated that they would not be influenced by what they had read or
seen, the judge overruled both of the motions. Without regard to
whether the judge's actions in this respect reach dimensions that
would justify issuance of the habeas writ, it should be noted that a
short continuance would have alleviated any problem with regard to
the judicial elections. The court in Delaney v. United States, 199
F.2d 107, 115 (C. A. 1st Cir. 1952), recognized such a duty under
similar circumstances, holding that "if assurance of a fair
trial would necessitate that the trial of the case be postponed
until after the election, then we think the law required no less
than that."
[Footnote 10] Typical comments on the trial by the press itself
include:
"The question of Dr. Sheppard's guilt or innocence still is
before the courts. Those who have examined the trial record
carefully are divided as to the propriety of the verdict. But almost
everyone who watched the performance of the Cleveland press agrees
that a fair hearing for the defendant, in that area, would be a
modern miracle." Harrison, "The Press vs. the
Courts," The Saturday Review (Oct. 15, 1955).
"At this distance, some 100 miles from Cleveland, it looks
to us as though the Sheppard murder case was sensationalized to the
point at which the press must ask itself if its freedom, carried to
excess, doesn't interfere with the conduct of fair trials."
Editorial, The Toledo Blade (Dec. 22, 1954).
[Footnote 11] In an unsworn statement, which the parties agreed
would have the status of a deposition, made 10 years after
Sheppard's conviction and six years after Judge Blythin's death,
Dorothy Kilgallen asserted that Judge Blythin had told her:
"It's an open and shut case . . . he is guilty as hell."
It is thus urged that Sheppard be released on the ground that the
judge's bias infected the entire trial. But we need not reach this
argument, since the judge's failure to insulate the proceedings from
prejudicial publicity and disruptive influences deprived Sheppard of
the chance to receive a fair hearing.
[Footnote 12] The judge's awareness of his power in this respect
is manifest from his assignment of seats to the press.
[Footnote 13] The problem here was further complicated by the
independent action of the newspapers in reporting
"evidence" and gossip which they uncovered. The press not
only inferred that Sheppard was guilty because he
"stalled" the investigation, hid behind his family, and
hired a prominent criminal lawyer, but denounced as "mass jury
tampering" his efforts to gather evidence of community
prejudice caused by such publications. Sheppard's counterattacks
added some fuel but, in these circumstances, cannot preclude him
from asserting his right to a fair trial. Putting to one side news
stories attributed to police officials, prospective witnesses, the
Sheppards, and the lawyers, it is possible that the other publicity
"would itself have had a prejudicial effect." Cf. Report
of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President
Kennedy, at 239.
[Footnote 14] When two police officers testified at trial that
Sheppard refused to take a lie detector test, the judge declined to
give a requested instruction that the results of such a test would
be inadmissible [384 U.S. 333, 361] in any event. He simply told the
jury that no person has an obligation "to take any lie detector
test."
[Footnote 15] Such "premature disclosure and weighing of the
evidence" may seriously jeopardize a defendant's right to an
impartial jury. "[N]either the press nor the public had a right
to be contemporaneously informed by the police or prosecuting
authorities of the details of the evidence being accumulated against
[Sheppard]." Cf. Report of the President's Commission, supra,
at 239, 240.
[Footnote 16] The Department of Justice, the City of New York,
and other governmental agencies have issued such regulations. E. g.,
28 CFR 50.2 (1966). For general information on this topic see
periodic publications (e. g., Nos. 71, 124, and 158) by the Freedom
of Information Center, School of Journalism, University of Missouri.
[384 U.S. 333, 364]