OPINION AND ORDER
On Oсtober 17, 1995, petitioner, James Caston, was convicted following a jury trial in New York Supreme Court, Queens County, of criminal sale of a controlled substance in the third degree in violation of N.Y.Penal Law § 220.39(1). He was sentenced to an indeterminate prison term of four to twelve years.
After exhausting direct appeals in state court, Caston petitioned this court on December 30, 1997 for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Caston claims that the trial court denied him the equal protection of law when, having found a prima facie showing of racial discrimination in the prosecutor’s exercise of five
*264
peremptory challenges, it then truncated the next stage of the inquiry required under
Batson v. State of Kentucky,
Respondent opposes the рetition on the ground that the Appellate Division, Second Department, expressly found that Caston was procedurally barred from advancing the claim. That finding, respondent argues, constitutes an adequate and independent state ground for the state court’s decision, thereby precluding federal habe-as review by this court.
As explained below, in this court’s view, the state court’s determination that Ca-ston’s federal Constitutional claim was procedurally defaulted does not have a “a ‘fair and substantial basis’ in state law,”
Garcia v. Lewis,
BACKGROUND
Under
Batson v. Kentucky,
The jury selection in this case took place in two rounds. Eighteen members of the venire comprised the first panel. Each attorney questioned the prospective jurors on the panel. The judge then asked each attorney for challenges for cause and peremptory challenges as to the first twelve members of the panel, and then again as to venirepersons thirteen through eighteen. At the close of this first round, defense counsel raised a Batson claim based on the prosecutor’s challenge of two of the black panel members. See Trial Tr. 162. The court ruled that, as of that time, defense counsel had failed to make out the necessary prima facie case. The panel was called back, the six jurors selected during that round were placed in the audience, and the remainder of that panel was dismissed. See id. at 164-65.
Another eighteen venirepersons were then seated for voir dire. After the second panel was questioned by both attorneys, it was excused for lunch. The judge then asked the attorneys for any challenges for cause and then for peremptory strikes as to the first six prospective jurors on that panel. The same procedure was employed for prospective jurors seven through nine, and the prosecutor peremptorily challenged number seven. Defense counsel pointed out that number seven was a black man, and that the prosecutor had also struck the only other black male available to that point on either panel. Thus, he renewed the Batson application:
Since the People have also struck Miss Smyler, who is also an Afro-American female, and they have seemed to have used an inordinate amount of their strikes against Afro-Americans, I would ask for the People to give a neutral reason why Rodney Black was struck.
He’s employed. He seemed like he could be a fair juror. I would like the People to come up with some explanation.
Id. at 211. The court again concluded that a prima facie case had not yet been made out and declined to compel the prosecutor to articulate race-neutral reasons for her challenges. The next two venirepersons were considered, one of whom was selected. At that point, eleven jurors had been selected and one remained to be chosen.
*265 When the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge against the next prospective juror, an African-American woman, defense counsel raised the Batson claim for the third time: “Your Honor, again, I would note that Grace Thomas is an Afro-American. She could be the 12th juror; her son is a police officer; she sat as a juror before. She would appear to be a qualified juror.” Id. at 213. The court asked defense counsel to articulate the pattern suggesting discriminatory use of the peremptory challenges. Counsel explained that Thomas was the third African-American venireperson struck during the second round, and that two others had been peremptorily challenged during the first round. Five of the eight strikes used by the prosecutor had been against black members of the panels. See id. at 213-14. 1 The court agreed that a prima facie case had been established, and asked the People “to set forth reasons for their exercising their peremptory challenges.” Id. at 214.
At that point, some confusion seems to have ensued as to the order in which the challenges should be explained. The court first directed the prоsecutor to set forth the basis for her challenge to Aileen Smyler, who had been the first African-American venireperson struck during the second round. Defense counsel then interposed: “Actually, I think it was Rodney Black, your Honor.” Id. The court then told the prosecutor to start with Black, the second of the venirepersons struck during the second round, and she provided her explanation for that peremptory challenge. 2 When the prosecutor finished her explanation, the judge responded by saying: “Then the other person would be Grace Thomas.” Id. at 215. The prosecutor explained her strike of Thomas and the court stated that it found the reasons acceptable. 3 See id. at 216. Following the court’s ruling with respect to these two challenged jurors, defense counsel noted his exception, but did not ask for explanations as to the other three challenged African-Americans. Nor did the court require the prosecutor to provide those explanations. Instead, the judge resumed the selection of the twelfth juror, asking the prosecutor if she would challenge the next venireperson for cause. See id.
That prospective juror was not challenged by either attorney, thus filling the last seat on the jury. Immediately after she was selected, there was an off-the-record discussion, at the close of which defense counsel asked the court to direct the prosecution to provide the missing Batson explanations: 4
*266 Your Honor, I just wanted to state one other thing for the record.
Which is that some of the jurors have already been excused, with regard to my Batson application. The People don’t only have to come up with race neutral reasons for two of them. Once the pri-ma facie case has been made out it’s my position they have to come up with all race neurtal [sic] reasons.
Id. at 217. The trial judge, however, dismissed this request, ruling that counsel had “waived that issue.” Id. That determination may have been based in part on the fact that the first round venirepersons had already been dismissed, although the basis for the court’s decision is unclear:
THE COURT: You’re rearguing after we moved on my position. You waived it.
MR. DUFAULT [defense counsel]: I’m just making a record.
THE COURT: You waived that issue. I can’t bring people back now that have already been—
MR. DUFAULT: Some of those people were already excused prior to the second panel being seated. They were in the first panel.
THE COURT: You’re continuing an argument that was finished so I’m saying you waived that.
Id. at 217-18. Thus, the court never required that the prosecutor give explanations for three of her peremptory strikes of African-American venirepersons.
On appeal, the Appellate Division, Second Department, found Caston’s
Batson
сlaim not to be preserved: “As the defendant did not promptly object when the court required the People to offer race-neutral explanations for only two of the five black venirepersons stricken by their peremptory challenges, his contention that the court should have requested explanations for the exclusion of all five black jurors is unpreserved for appellate review....”
People v. Caston,
DISCUSSION
I. State Procedural Default as an Adequate State Ground
Ordinarily, a state procedural bar constitutes an adequate and independent state ground for a state court’s decision, blocking habeas review in the federal courts.
See Coleman v. Thompson,
The Second Circuit recently reaffirmed that a state court’s finding of procedural default constitutes an “adequate” ground only “if there is a ‘fair and substantial’ basis in state law for the state court’s determination.”
Id.
at 78. The procedural rule must be “strictly or regularly followed.”
Wedra v. Lefevre,
In analyzing whether a state procedural default has a fair and substantial basis in state law, then, the court considers whether litigants had notice of it, whether it is consistently applied in similar circumstances, and whether its application serves legitimate state interests.
II. The Procedural Bar Invoked in Caston’s Case
The procedural bar at issue in this case is New York’s contemporaneous objection rule, codified at N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law § 470.05(2), which reads:
For purposes of appeal, a question of law with respect to a ruling or instruction of a criminal court during a trial or proceeding is presented when a protest thereto was registered, by the party claiming error, at the time of such ruling or instruction or at any subsequent time when the court had an opportunity of effectively changing the same. *272 prevent discrimination in the selection of a jury....
*267
This rule requires that the issue on appeal be “brought to the attention of the trial court át a time and in а way that [gives] the latter the opportunity to remedy the problem and thereby avert reversible error.”
People v. Luperon,
III. The Adequacy of the Procedural Bar
Caston does not contend that New York’s contemporaneous objection rule is itself novel or that he did not have notice of it, as was the case in
Patterson,
A. The Timeliness of the Objection
New York law is clear that
Batson
objections are timely when brought after jury selection but before the jury is sworn.
See People v. Harris,
Caston renewed his objection to the truncated explanation phase of the inquiry before the jury was sworn. Indеed, because he renewed the objection while the second panel was still at lunch, the jurors who had been selected from the second panel had not yet even been notified that they would be serving on the jury. The only arguable defect in Caston’s Batson challenge was the brief interlude between counsel’s establishment of a prima facie Batson claim and his renewed objection to the absence of explanations for three of the peremptory strikes. The court is unable to discern any significance to that fact that would remove this case from the ambit of New York’s general rule, under which a Batson objection is timely if raised before the jury is sworn.
Respondent argues that the delay between the court’s acceptance of the prosecutor’s two explanations in apparent satisfaction of her obligation under Batson and the renewed objection rendered the renewed objection untimеly. Respondent’s primary arguments in support of this position are that: 1) New York law requires a party to make all Batson objections during *269 one colloquy, and 2) the intervening selection of the twelfth juror limited the trial court’s ability to correct any Batson violation. A review of New York law has convinced this court that these contentions are incorrect, and that Caston’s objection was timely.
1. Respondent’s Asserted “One Colloquy Rule”
According to respondent, Caston’s objection was untimely though made prior to the jury being sworn because defense counsel did not protest the incomplete explanations at the time the inquiry was prematurely terminated. He argues that New York requires a party to raise all of the arguments on which its Batson claims relies during the first “Batson colloquy.” The cases cited by respondent do not support this contention.
Rather than create a “one colloquy rule,” respondent’s authorities simply require that, consistent with the contemporаneous objection rule, a party must fully apprise the trial judge of the grounds for a
Batson
claim before that claim is heard on appeal. Respondent’s asserted rule derives from
People v. Smith,
*270
Respondent also cites
People v. Font,
In sum, the holding of respondent’s cases, that a defendant must present the specific grounds for his Batson claim to the trial judge, is a logical application of § 470.05(2)’s contemporaneous objection rule. These cases do not hold, as respondent asserts, that all objections relating to a Batson claim must be raised in a single colloquy. Such a formalistic rule would fly in the face of the § 470.05(2), which defines timeliness in terms of the availability of a remedy, particularly in light of the general New York rule that Batson remedies are available until the moment the jury is sworn. Because there is no “one colloquy rule” exception, the general rule directs that Caston’s Batson objection was timely as it was raised before the jury was sworn.
2. The Availability of Remedies
Respondent also argues that, even in the absence of a “one colloquy rule” rendering the claim
per se
untimely, the objection was nevertheless untimely in this case because, due to the intervening selection of the twelfth juror, the error was no longer susceptible to correction by the trial judge.
See
Respondent’s Mem. of Law 26 (“In the present case, the court could not effectively respond to petitioner’s belated request for race-neutral explanations because petitioner did not make his request until after the twelfth juror had actually been selected.”). Notwithstanding the general rule allowing
Batson
claims to be raised until the jury is sworn, this court would agree that defense counsel’s delayed renewal of his
Batson
objection, though made before the jury was sworn, would be untimely if the delay had prevented the trial court from remedying the violation or had narrowed the range оf remedies available.
See People v. Parks,
210 AD.2d 437, 437,
While it is true that the jury was technically filled by the time the objection was lodged, the court finds no case suggesting that factor to be an obstacle to remedying a
Batson
violation.
Batson
itself recognized two appropriate remedies for a
Batson
violation: 1) the discharge of the venire and commencement anew of jury selection, and 2) the disallowance of the discriminatory challenges and resumption of the jury selection with those jurors reinstated to the venire.
See Batson,
Respondent nonetheless argues that the selection of the twelfth juror presented a “compelling reason why the court could not ask the prosecutor to provide race-neutral reasons for the other three excluded prospective jurors.” Respondent’s Mem. of Law 26. In support of this position, respondent contends that the twelfth juror’s state constitutional right to serve on the jury would have been infringed had she been displaced.
See id.
(citing New York caselaw and N.Y. Const, art. I, § 1). However, “no citizen has a right to sit on any particular petit jury.”
People v. Kern,
Indeed, since Batson’s promulgation, courts have recognized that, in order to remedy a
Batson
violation, it may be necessary to displace jurors already selected. As noted above,
Batson
itself allowed that jury selection may need to be begun anew with a fresh panel, necessarily depriving those jurors already selected of their opportunity to serve.
See Batson,
Conceivably, if jurors are to assume the positions they would have had if there had been no discrimination, it could require removing from the panel jurors who had been selected before the Bat-son-Kem challenge was sustained. While one might consider this to be unfair, it would nevertheless be consistent with the underlying principle embodied by both Batson and Kern, to
*272
People v. Moten,
In any event, even if the twelfth juror had not yеt been chosen, it is possible that other previously selected jurors would have been displaced. Before the selection of the twelfth juror, there were three challenged venirepersons for whom explanations were wanting and one seat remaining. Thus, had the Batson colloquy been concluded before the last juror was selected and had the court sustained two or three of defense counsel’s challenges to the prosecutor’s peremptory strikes, the tenth and eleventh jurors, who had already been selected but not notified of their selection, may have been removed from the jury, or all selected jurors would have been dismissed and the process begun anew.
Respondent also raises the spectre of manipulation and “sandbagging.” This concern is sometimes cited as a rationale for application of the contempоraneous objection rule in the
Batson
context, but generally when the claim is first raised after the trial has begun.
See McCrory,
Respondent argues, however, that the risk of sandbagging and manipulation exists even during jury selection. Respondent contends that allowing a defendant to delay a
Batson
claim arising out of early peremptory challenges until after challenged jurors are dismissed “would make it extremely difficult for the court and the prosecutor to remember many of the details regarding the stricken jurors,” Respondent’s Mem. of Law 31, and “cause all of the jurors who were the subject of the
Batson
challenge to be unavailable at the time the objection was finally raised.”
Id.
at 29-30. Alternatively, cautions respondent, a defendant could, as in this case, dupe the trial court into believing that a timely
Batson
claim had been abandoned only to resurrect it latér when he concludes the jury is not composed to his liking.
9
See id.
at 32 (citing
Brewer v. Marshall,
In sum, it is difficult to comprehend how choosing the twelfth juror narrowed the court’s options under these circumstances. Batson violations are regularly remedied by means that require previously selected jurors to be displaced. The fact that defense counsel could have raised a timely Batson claim for the first time at the close of jury selection refutes respondent’s arguments that the trial court did not have remedies available tо it or that a great risk of manipulation resulted from the delayed objection. Particularly given that six of the seats on the jury had been filled only moments before, without the knowledge of the jurors tapped, the court could have remedied any violation with minimal disruption. The objection was lodged at a “subsequent time when the court had an opportunity of effectively changing” its decision to require only two of the necessary five explanations, N.Y.Crim.Proc.Law § 470.05(2), and was therefore timely within the meaning of New York’s contemporaneous objection rule.
B. Incomplete Batson Inquines and the Need to Object
Even assuming
arguendo
that Caston’s renewed objection to the truncated explanation phase of the
Batson
inquiry was flawed, the procedural default invoked by the Appellate Division would not constitute an adequate state ground for that court’s decision. New York law does not clearly establish what sort of objection is required in casеs such as this, when the
Batson
claim is initially raised during jury selection but the explanation phase of the
Batson
inquiry is not completed. Both
People v. Starks,
The application of the contemporaneous objection rule to bar
Batson
appeals based on incomplete explanations is not, in the words of
James v. Kentucky,
C. New York’s Interests in Applying the Procedural Bar to This Case
The state interests underlying the application of the contemporaneous objection rule in the
Batson
context, “to permit the court to conduct a hearing at the earliest opportunity while matters are fresh in the minds of the participants, especially the Trial Judge” and to “prevent any delay in starting the trial if a new venire must be drawn,”
Harris,
D. Summary
The court is unable to discern any significance to the delayed objection or the intervening selection of the twelfth juror that would distinguish this case from New York’s general rule that a Batson claim is timely so long as raised before the jury is sworn. It is conceivable that a delay between an initial Batson inquiry and a renewed objection to incomplete explana *275 tions, even if raised before the jury is sworn, could make completing the Batson inquiry or remedying a Batson violation more difficult. In this case, however, the options available to the court to correct the alleged error did not change. Nor was the delay long enough to impede 'the reliability of the Batson inquiry. Because Caston’s objection was renewеd prior to the jury being sworn, and because the delay prior to that renewed objection did not make the asserted Batson violation any less susceptible to correction, Caston’s objection was timely under New York law. 12 The state court’s invocation of the contemporaneous objection rule was a departure from its usual practice in Batson cases and did not serve legitimate and substantial state interests; consequently, the asserted procedural default lacks a fair and substantial basis in state law and cannot preclude habeas review.
IV. Remedy
As the procedural default invoked by the Appellate Division is not an adequate state ground for its decision, this court must consider Caston’s claim on the merits. There is no dispute that the trial court did not complete the
Batson
inquiry, seeking as it did explanation as to only two of the five African-American challenged venireрersons. The sole question is of the appropriate remedy.
13
The petitioner asks this court to conduct an evidentiary hearing to examine the remaining three peremptory challenges or, in the alternative, to issue a conditional writ under which Caston will be released if a new trial or hearing is not conducted within a reasonable time.
See
Petitioner’s Mem. of Law
*276
19. A
Batson
inquiry is fact- and context-specific, as it requires the court to assess the legitimacy of the prosecutor’s proffered reasons for exercising peremptory challenges. This task demands some familiarity with the panel, the voir dire, the lawyers, and the case. Undoubtedly, the passing of four years since the jury selection will make the analysis difficult.
See Scott,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained herein, it is ORDERED that the writ of habeas corpus issue and that the petitioner’s judgment and conviction in the case of People v. Caston, Queens County Ind. No. 10360/95, be vacated and set aside and the petitioner be released from custody, unless within 60 days the trial court has determined that the prosecutor did not exercise peremptory challengеs in violation of the Equal Protection Clause and Batson v. Kentucky or proceedings to retry the petitioner are initiated.
The Clerk of Court is directed to enter judgment accordingly.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
.The full text of defense counsel’s third Bat-son application is as follows:
Rodney Black was struck, Aileen Smyler was struck, Grace Thomas was struck; those are all Afro-Americans.
In the first panel Martin King was struck, he was the only Afro-American male in that panel. He was struck and Sandra Bellamy was struck, also a female Afro-American.
That is one, two, three, four, five, of the eight strikes that the People have used are Afro-Americans. The defendant is being deprived of a right to a jury of his peers among whom are Afro-Americans.
The Afro-Americans also have their own constitutional right to sit as jurors in the case, unless the People have a good reason that can be articulated for striking, peremptorily striking such a juror. And they do have to give the Court some reason, I would submit.
Trial Tr. 213-14.
. The prosecutor explained that she was of the impression that Black beliеved that if a witness was nervous, that person was probably lying. She also said that she "didn’t feel that [she] established a rapport with him,” and that she "had to spoon-feed him” certain responses. Id. at 215.
. Thomas had said that her nephew had been convicted of a drug offense five years earlier in Queens County, where Caston was being prosecuted. See id. at 216.
. The entire transcript of the events that transpired between the end of the first discussion of the prosecution's explanations of its peremptory challenges and defense counsel's renewal of that inquiry is as follows:
THE COURT: With regards to the person sitting in seat number 13, Yvonne Bundick, do the People have any challenge for cause?
*266 MS. LYNCH [the prosecutor]: No, your Hon- or.
THE COURT: Does the defendant?
MR. DUFAULT [defense counsel]: No.
THE COURT: People have any peremptory challenges?
MS. LYNCH: No, your Honor.
THE COURT: Does the defense?
MR. DUFAULT: Excuse me, Judge, would this be the 12th juror?
THE COURT: Yes.
MR. DUFAULT: No peremptory challenge.
THE COURT: So we have our twelve jurors selected.
Counsel, would you step up.
(Whereupon, there was a discussion held at the bench, off the record, among the Court and both counsel.)
Id. at 216-1-7. At that point, defense counsel again sought explanations for the peremptory challenges of the other three African-American venirepersons.
. The Appellate Division also rejected Ca-ston’s claim that the trial court erred in not reading back a portion of the testimony to the jury during its deliberations, finding the error harmless. That claim is not relevant to this habeas petition.
. The question more recently settled was not whether defendants
may
bring
Batson
claims after jury selection has been completed, but whether they
must
wait until the end of jury selection.
People v. Bolling,
. Analyzed another way, these cases are concerned with
how
a
Batson
claim must be raised, not
when
it must be raised. The contemporaneous objection rule requires that the issue on appeal be "brought to the attention of the trial court
at a time
and
in a way
that [gives] the latter the opportunity to remedy the problem and thereby avert reversible er
*270
ror.”
People v. Luperon, 85
N.Y.2d 71, 78,
. Defense counsel unambiguously asked the court to complete the second stage of the Batson inquiry, in which the prosecution articulates any race-neutral explanations it has for its strikes:
Your Honor, I just wanted to state one other thing for the record.
Which is that some of the jurors have already been excused, with regard to my Batson application. The People don’t only have to come up with race neutral reasons for two of them. Once the prima facie case has been made out it's my position they have to come up with all race neutral [sic] reasons.
Trial Tr. 217.
. The respondent suggests that the defense counsеl’s behavior in this case gave the court reason to believe that "he had abandoned any request for explanations of the prior jurors.” Respondent's Mem. of Law 23-24. This interpretation of events does not seem to the court a fair reading of the record. The exchange concerning which peremptory challenge the prosecutor was to explain first reflects simple confusion, not tactical scheming. See Trial Tr. 214-15. The lack of objection in the face of the court's apparent decision to forego three of the required explanations appears to be the result of misunderstanding, or, at worst, oversight. See id. at 216-17. In addition, even if Caston's attorney did mistakenly (or even intentionally) create the impression that he was abandoning his request for the remaining explanations, that representation did not, as explained in the text, give the defendant аny tactical advantage.
. In contrast,
Brewer,
which found a Massachusetts court's procedural bar of a
Batson
claim to be justified because the claim was not brought at the time the challenged peremptory strikes were made, relied on the fact that the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court had not previously held
Batson
applications to be timely if raised after jury selection was completed.
See Brewer,
. Several of respondent's arguments challenge New York's general rule concerning the timeliness of
Batson
claims as stated in
Harris.
Even if, as respondent would apparently favor, the Appellate Division's decision were interpreted as announcing a rule that
Batson
claims should be raised and decided at the time the allegedly discriminatory challenges are made, such a rule would not be an adequate state ground as applied to Caston. To hold Caston to a new rule governing the timeliness of
Batson
claims would be to "apply a rule unannounced at the time of petitioner's trial,” and the new rule consequently would be "inadequate to serve as an independent state ground within the meaning of
James [v. Kentucky,
. This court is not holding, as the respondent fears,
see
Respondent’s Mem. of Law 37-43, that the trial court must
sua sponte
require explanations for all peremptory strikes once a prima facie
Batson
claim is made out.
Batson
left the details of implementation of the rule it established to the states.
See
. The respondent argues that ’’[t]o be entitled to relief in this case, petitioner must show that the [United States] Supreme Court has expressly ruled that a Batson claim can be preserved so long as an objection is raised any time before the jury is sworn, regardless of whether the moving party clearly and specifically raised all the factual and legal grounds in support of the claim during the Batson colloquy.” Respondent’s Mem. of Law 34. This argument is based on a provision of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), codified at 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1), which states that a writ of habeas corpus shall not be granted unless the adjudication of the claim "resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” The respondent's argument conflates the substantive basis on which the writ is granted with the preliminary question of whether the underlying claim may be heard on the merits. The substantive federal law applicable in this case, as determined by the Supreme Court, is Bat-son. That, and not the threshold determination that there is not an adequate state ground for the state court’s decision, is the basis on which the writ is granted.
Similarly, this decision does not, as respondent contends, announce a new rule in violation of
Teague v. Lane,
