Over
the weekend the president’s critics claimed his commutation of Roger Stone’s
sentence was somehow an attack on the judicial system. The facts, however, show
that Mr. Stone did not get a fair trial and when that information was presented
to the judge she ignored it. The following is an article that was penned by
noted liberal law professor Jonathan Turley for The Hill. Note that it was written back in February. After you read
this, which is just one of the problems with the Stone prosecution, ask
yourself: If you were in a similar position would you think your trial was fair
with a person like this as foreman of the jury that convicted you?
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Juror 1261 in Roger Stone's
case: Was justice undone?
BY JONATHAN TURLEY, OPINION
CONTRIBUTOR — 02/15/20 10:30 AM EST
She was Juror No. 1261, and
her examination by the federal court and counsel before the trial was anything
but notable. And that is precisely the problem.
Juror 1261, we now know,
was Tomeka Hart. Her
identity would have remained publicly unknown except for a public statement she
made after the Department of Justice (DOJ) rescinded its initial sentencing
recommendation for Trump confidant Roger Stone. In the midst of
the firestorm of allegations of political interference, Hart disclosed that she
was the foreperson on the Stone jury and gave a full-throated defense of the
trial prosecutors: “It pains me to see the DOJ now interfere with the hard work
of the prosecutors.”
That statement led many people
to Google her name, and what they found was a litany of postings not only
hostile to President
Trump and his administration but also specifically commenting on Stone
and his arrest — before she ever appeared for jury duty.
I have previously written about how I believe that the DOJ
was correct in its rejection of the absurdly high recommendation of seven to
nine years in prison for Stone. However, there are legitimate questions
that must still be addressed on how the Justice Department came to that
decision. Yet while cable shows exhaustively cover that story, there is an
equally serious question as to whether the conviction itself, rather than the
sentencing recommendation, should be reevaluated.
Hart is a Democratic activist
and critic of the Trump administration. She was the Memphis City Schools board
president. Not surprisingly, given her political background (including a
run for Congress), Hart has been vocal in public on her views of Trump and his
associates.
She referred to the President with a hashtag of “klanpresident” and
spoke out against “Trump and the white supremacist racists.” She posted
about how she and others protested outside a Trump hotel and shouted, “Shame,
shame, shame!” When profanities were projected on the Trump hotel, she
exclaimed on Jan. 13, 2018, “Gotta love it.” On March 24, 2019, she shared a Facebook
post — no longer public — while calling attention to “the numerous
indictments, guilty pleas, and convictions of people in 45’s inner-circle.”
More worrisome are her direct
references to Stone, including a retweeted post, in January 2019, from Bakari
Sellers, again raising racist associations and stating that “Roger Stone has y’all talking about reviewing use of force
guidelines.” She also described Trump supporters such as Stone
as racists and Putin cronies.
In addition to her prior
statements about Trump, his associates and this case, Hart is a lawyer. That
only magnifies concerns that any bias on her part may have had a more
pronounced influence on her fellow jurors.
In fact, except for a jury
pool composed entirely of House impeachment managers, Hart would appear to be a
standout for a peremptory challenge by the defense team over bias. That is why
the most surprising aspect of this story is not the review of her public
statements but the review of her examination before trial. The brief
examination in the voir dire hearing shows that Hart did disclose her ties to
the Democratic Party. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson asked if
Hart’s political history would prevent her from being fair, and Hart assured
her it would not.
While Hart’s answers on the
jury questionnaire remain sealed, Judge Jackson noted, “You've also indicated a
fair amount of paying attention to news and social media, including about
political things?” Hart does not volunteer that she did far more than “pay
attention to news and social media” and was, in fact, an anti-Trump protester
and social media critic.
Jackson seemed unaware of
anything more than Hart’s following the news and asked if anything that Hart
saw would affect her views. Hart again did not mention her protesting or public
commentary and said she could not think of anything that would cause bias —
“nothing that I can recall specifically. I do watch, sometimes paying attention
but sometimes in the background, CNN. So, I recall just hearing about him being
part of the campaign and some belief or reporting around interaction with the
Russian probe and interaction with him and people in the country, but I don't
have a whole lot of details. I don't pay that close attention or watch C-SPAN.”
She never mentioned that she
specifically discussed Stone’s arrest and the objections to his treatment
during that arrest as well as denouncing all of the associates of Trump as a
virtual criminal enterprise.
Stone’s counsel, Robert
Buschel, also asked a few questions but was either entirely uninformed or
utterly incompetent. Buschel only asked about Hart being a Democrat who ran for
Congress. The examination by the defense amounted to less than two pages and
roughly 250 words of exchange with Hart. It seems most likely that Buschel
did not have a clue about Hart’s actual political activism and commentary.
That lack of knowledge is not
surprising since multiple questions on the jury questionnaire allowed her to
reveal her past protests and postings. For example, Question 30 asked
whether she had any opinion about figures such Donald Trump. There also
was Question 23 that asked whether she had "written or posted
anything for public consumption about the defendant, the House Permanent Select
Committee on Intelligence investigation into Russian interference in the 2016
presidential election, or the investigation conducted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller?"
Questions 34 and 35 specifically ask about her prior knowledge or opinions of
the Stone case, which she referenced on social media. It is hard to believe
that she disclosed these public statements in her answer and was not questioned
about them.
If this information was
withheld by Hart, it raises a question about the veracity of her
testimony and, more importantly, the fairness of the trial.
It certainly seems Hart had no
place on the Stone jury. The Supreme Court has repeatedly declared that
the “minimal standards of due process” demand “a panel of impartial,
indifferent jurors.” Hart’s record suggests little that is impartial or
indifferent. She was perfectly within her right to engage in such
commentary and protests — but she had no right to sit in judgment of an
associate of the president after her public declarations. Her
participation raises serious arguments for setting aside the verdict, from the
possibility of ineffective counsel to the denial of due process.
The burden now is on Judge
Jackson to hold a hearing on this matter and address the possible need for a
mistrial. And one thing will be clear: Judge Jackson, in the words of
Juror No. 1261, does not “gotta love” any of this.
Jonathan Turley is the Shapiro
Professor of Public Interest Law for George Washington University and served as
the last lead counsel during a Senate impeachment trial. He testified as a
witness expert in the House Judiciary Committee hearing during the impeachment
inquiry of President Trump.
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