Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado: Elevating a Constitutional Exception Above the Tanner Framework
Caroline Covington
In Pena-Rodriguez v. Colorado, the Supreme Court of the United States addressed whether post-verdict juror testimony about racial bias during jury deliberations is a constitutionally mandated exception to Federal Rule of Evidence 606(b) (“Rule 606(b)”) and its state analogues. Although jurors are generally barred by the “no-impeachment rule” from testifying about the deliberation process to question the validity of the verdict, the Court ruled that the Sixth Amendment requires that Rule 606(b) give way to allow the trial court to consider evidence of a juror’s reliance on racial animus to convict a criminal defendant.
The Court correctly held that the Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury should take priority over a rigid application of Rule 606(b) when a jury member produces evidence of racially biased statements during deliberations. As jurisdictions that allow racial bias exceptions demonstrate, the Court’s exception will not impede the policy goals advanced in support of Rule 606(b). First, an exception for juror testimony on racial bias will not disrupt the finality of verdicts nor increase post-verdict litigation because the Court narrowly tailored the exception to apply only in instances where the racial bias cast substantial doubt on the fairness and impartiality of the verdict. Additionally, courts are already well-equipped to implement procedures to receive juror testimony under the Court’s exception that will not compromise the privacy of jury deliberations. Rule 606(b) already permits disclosure under its enumerated exceptions about what happened in the jury room if the testimony concerned prejudicial extraneous information and outside influence. Courts can use these same procedures to receive testimony under one of the Rule’s exceptions to receive testimony on racial bias within deliberations without significant intrusion into the inner workings of the deliberative process. The Court’s exception will also not increase post-verdict harassment of jurors because of existing professional and local rules that restrictively govern contact with jurors. Lastly, the Court’s decision was correctly decided because it promotes public confidence in the fairness of the jury system by allowing consideration of whether racial bias affected a defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury.