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In the trial of pharmacist Barry Cadden, federal jurors were instructed that all 12 of them had to agree — guilty or not guilty — before reaching a verdict. Cadden was at the center of a deadly outbreak of fungal meningitis linked to contaminated steroid injections prepared by his company, the New England Compounding Center. At least 60 people died. Although Cadden was found guilty in March of racketeering and mail fraud, the jury found him not guilty of the most serious charge: second-degree murder, which could have meant a life sentence. But the jurors' verdict form indicates they were not unanimous, as the court required, but divided. And the judge, U.S. District Judge Richard Stearns, who was the only one other than the jurors to see the verdict slips, did not question the jurors about their apparent division — which might have led to further deliberations. Lawyers, former prosecutors and a retired federal judge are now calling the situation unprecedented. 'It’s An Extraordinary Verdict Form' Cadden's trial lasted nine weeks, with juror deliberations going on for 20 hours. "And then the verdict comes in," lawyer David Schumacher says, "and, of course, there’s incredible anticipation as the jury comes back and the verdict is about to be read. The courtroom was full. The overflow courtroom had lots of people in it. People were hanging on this verdict to see what was going to happen." Until January, Schumacher was assistant U.S. attorney and deputy chief of the health care fraud unit which investigated and then prosecuted Barry Cadden. "Just an incredible human tragedy," Schumacher says about the NECC outbreak, "with hundreds of people injured and numerous people dying as a result of these tainted steroids that were injected into people’s bodies." Judge Stearns had given the jurors the standard instructions, he says. "You have to be unanimous up or down: guilty or not guilty," Schumacher says. The clerk handed the jurors' verdict form to Judge Stearns. He read the 21 pages of verdicts to himself. But there was something amiss. Stearns said, "In some cases on the verdict slip ... the jurors indicate how they voted in terms of a division." NYU School of Law Professor Stephen Gillers, considered a national expert on judicial ethics and the law governing trials, says that was "weird." "The word 'division' is inconsistent with the word 'unanimous,' and verdicts have to be unanimous in federal court in criminal cases," Gillers says.

"It’s an extraordinary verdict form, it’s like nothing I’ve ever seen." David Schumacher, former prosecutor

When Stearns told his clerk to read the verdicts but not how the jurors voted, two puzzled prosecutors looked at each other as if to say: “What?” What they heard, at first, was reassuring — “guilty” verdicts for each of the first 27 racketeering acts. In all, Cadden would be convicted on 57 counts of racketeering and mail fraud. But the tide changed when it came to the acts of second-degree murder. They were at the heart of the case because convictions could mean Cadden would go to prison for life. “Not guilty” verdicts were read for every one of the 25 second-degree murder acts. The prosecutors and a packed audience were stunned. Remember: The clerk was the only one with the verdict form, so the lawyers couldn't see what she was reading. But much later, when they did see that form and when it was too late to do anything about it, the prosecutors discovered something even more stunning. "It’s an extraordinary verdict form, it’s like nothing I’ve ever seen," Schumacher says. "They actually recorded numbers. They're literally recording their votes." On each verdict where the jurors checked “not guilty," you can see how they voted. Nine for guilty and three for not guilty on some of the murder charges — eight to four on others. On page 1 of the verdict form, it says a check mark equals "unanimous." As this excerpt shows, however, there are vote tallies next to the individual racketeering acts. I asked former Boston federal Judge Nancy Gertner if she has ever seen numbers on a verdict form. "No, never," Gertner said. "I’ve never seen a verdict form with numbers, absolutely." “Are you kidding me?” said one trial lawyer. "No one ever enters numbers on a jury form.” The lawyer was one of several who spoke to us but requested anonymity because he tries cases before Judge Stearns. The Possibility Of A Hung Jury "It is a gigantic mess," says Harvey Silverglate, a trial and appellate lawyer and a legal writer. Silverglate points to all the signs that the jurors returned verdicts that weren’t unanimous and, thus, weren’t verdicts at all. Whenever the form says "guilty," for instance, there is a check mark and a handwritten note: “check mark equals unanimous." You don't see that for the "not guilty" verdicts, which are the only verdicts that come with numbers — numbers that show a split. "To me, this means there was a hung jury," Silverglate says. That is, a jury that was divided. NYU's Gillers calls the situation “astonishing." "It’s impossible, really, to say what the jury was thinking," Gillers says. "At best there's an ambiguity. My best guess is that the jury was telling the judge where it was divided on certain counts and where it was unanimous on other counts, and the judge misinterpreted that to mean that it was unanimous on all counts." Gillers calls the ramifications of this ambiguity "enormous." Because if the judge determines that jurors are split, he can send them back to resume deliberations — and the verdict form for Cadden shows the jurors were close to 12, for guilty, on a number of murder charges.

"The judge has the document in front of him. He sees the numbers. It was incumbent on the judge to recognize immediately that was not clear." Stephen Gillers, NYU law professor