The Oyez Project Virtual Tour of the Supreme Court Building

Abstract

Oral Argument: Monday, February 28, 1966
Decision: Monday, June 6, 1966
Issues: Criminal Procedure, Extra-Legal Jury Influences, Pretrial Publicity

Advocates

Bernard A. Berkman (Argued the cause for the American Civil Liberties Union et al., as amici curiae, urging reversal)
F. Lee Bailey (Argued the cause for the petitioner)
John T. Corrigan (Argued the cause for the respondent)
William B. Saxbe (Argued the cause for the respondent)

Facts of the Case

After suffering a trial court conviction of second-degree murder for the bludgeoning death of his pregnant wife, Samuel Sheppard challenged the verdict as the product of an unfair trial. Sheppard, who maintained his innocence of the crime, alleged that the trial judge failed to protect him from the massive, widespread, and prejudicial publicity that attended his prosecution. On appeal from an Ohio district court ruling supporting his claim, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed. When Sheppard appealed again, the Supreme Court granted certiorari.

Question

What threshold must be crossed before a trial is said to be so prejudicial, due to context and publicity, as to interfere with a defendant's Fifth Amendment due process right to a fair trial?

Conclusion

In an 8-to-1 decision the Court found that Sheppard did not receive a fair trial. Noting that although freedom of expression should be given great latitude, the Court held that it must not be so broad as to divert the trial away from its primary purpose: adjudicating both criminal and civil matters in an objective, calm, and solemn courtroom setting. The Cleveland television media's repeated broadcasts of Sheppard confessing in detail to crimes he was later charged with, the blatant and hostile trial coverage by Cleveland's radio and print media, and the physical arrangement of the courtroom itself - which facilitated collaboration between the prosecution and present media - all combined to so inflame the jurors' minds against Sheppard as to deny him a fair trial. The Court concluded that the trial judge should have either postponed the proceedings or transferred them to a different venue.

Supreme Court Justice Opinions and Votes (by Seniority)

Sort by Ideology
(More information here)
Full Opinion: Criminal Procedure, Extra-Legal Jury Influences, Pretrial Publicity: 8 - 1
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
Warren
Voted with the minority
Black
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
Douglas
Voted with the majority, authored an opinion
Clark
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
Harlan
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
Brennan
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
Stewart
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
White
Voted with the majority, joined Clark's opinion
Fortas

Cite this page

The Oyez Project, Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333 (1966),
available at: <http://www.oyez.org/cases/1960-1969/1965/1965_490/>
(last visited ).