During jury selection in Vanderburgh County, Indiana, Superior Court, in petitioner Charles Splunge’s trial for murder and robbery, the prosecutor used two of his peremptory challenges to exclude the only two black venire members from the petit jury. Splunge, who is also black, moved to discharge the jury before it was sworn on the basis that the prosecutor had purposefully excluded black potential jurors in violation of
Batson v. Kentucky,
A divided Indiana Supreme Court affirmed Splunge’s conviction. Chief Judge Sharp of the Northern District of Indiana concluded, however, that the prosecutor had exercised one peremptory challenge on the basis of race in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment (Memorandum Opinion and Order of Chief Judge Sharp, February 14, 1991). He therefore granted the writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 unless the defendant is retried within specified time limits. For the reasons set forth below, the judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
I.
A. Facts
Kenneth Wallace picked up two hitchhikers, Charles Splunge and Tara Fox, outside an Evansville, Indiana, liquor store. Wallace continued driving, Fox sat in the front passenger seat, and Splunge sat in the back seat of the car. When Wallace halted at a stop sign, Fox fired two shots at him. Fox and Splunge pushed Wallace out of the car and left him bleeding in the street. They then drove off in Wallace’s car. Wallace survived long enough to tell the police what had happened, but died in surgery a short time later of massive internal hemorrhaging. 1
B. Procedure
On August 14, 1986, a Superior Court jury convicted Charles Splunge of murder and robbery. He was later sentenced to sixty years’ imprisonment. His conviction and sentence followed the trial judge’s denial of defense counsel’s motion to dismiss the jury on the basis that the prosecutor had exercised his peremptory challenges in an unconstitutional manner. On direct appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court, Splunge raised five alleged errors in support of his contention that his conviction be overturned. By a sharply divided vote, that court held that Splunge had not shown reversible error.
Splunge v. State,
Splunge then petitioned for collateral relief in federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. As noted, Chief Judge Sharp *707 granted defendant the writ of habeas corpus absent retrial within 120 days from the issuance of a final mandate. That judgment was appealed to this Court, which assumed jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and 28 U.S.C. § 2253.
II.
A. Batson Challenge
Analysis of this case appropriately begins with
Batson v. Kentucky,
In
Batson
the Supreme Court set forth three requirements that the defendant must meet in order to establish a prima facie case of purposeful race-based discrimination. The defendant must show that 1) he or she is a member of a cognizable racial group, 2) the prosecutor exercised peremptory challenges to remove persons of the defendant’s race from the venire, and 3) facts and relevant circumstances raise an inference that the prosecution used those challenges to exclude members of the venire from the petit jury on the basis of race.
Id.
at 96-97,
In this case, respondents “concede that Splunge could have made a prima facie showing” (Br. 7), and rightly so, for he has established a prima facie case. First, Splunge is a black individual, and blacks are clearly a cognizable racial group under the Fourteenth Amendment. Second, the prosecution used its peremptory challenges to exclude all of the black members of the venire. And finally, the prosecutor’s questions and statements during voir dire examination raise an inference that he used at least one challenge to exclude a black woman from the venire solely because she, like the defendant, was black and the victim was white.
During voir dire, the prosecutor asked only the black members of the venire, Mr. Clark and Ms. Brodie, whether their race would influence their decision in the case. Specifically, he asked them if they would be partial to the defendant because he is black. The examination of Connie Brodie by prosecutor Richard D’Amour was as follows:
Mr. D’Amour: The fact that Mr. Splunge is a black man, as you are a black woman, is that going to enter into your mind in determining whether he is guilty or innocent.
Connie Brodie: No.
Mr. D’Amour: You’re not going to give his testimony any more credence just because you’re of the same race, is that correct?
Connie Brodie: Right. (R.96.)
Similarly, the examination of Charles Clark was as follows:
Mr. D’Amour: Okay. Now, Mr. Clark, as is very obvious, you are a Negro man, and Mr. Splunge is a Negro man. The fact that you are both of the same race, what effect, if any, will that have on your ability to be fair and impartial as a juror?
Charles Clark: None.
Mr. D’Amour: You can put that aside? You’re not going to give Charles Splunge’s testimony, if he testifies, more credit just because he’s a black man?
*708 Charles Clark: I think no citizen deserves that regardless of his race as far as I’m concerned.
Mr. D’Amour: So you’re not going to look on him more favorably just because of race?
Charles Clark: No. (R.76.)
The prosecutor’s preconception that a black citizen would be more sympathetic to a black defendant was also seemingly evidenced by another question he asked Mr. Clark. The prosecutor asked Clark whether anyone he knew had been charged with robbery or murder, R.76„ although he asked the next three white potential jurors whether they or their friends had ever been victims of a robbery, R.80, R.82, R.84.
Once the defendant has established a pri-ma facie case of race-based discrimination, as the defendant has done in this case, “the burden shifts to the state to come forward with a neutral explanation for challenging black jurors.”
Batson,
After the prosecutor advances a race-neutral reason for his challenge, the trial court must evaluate whether the defendant has sustained his burden of proving purposeful discrimination. Here the trial court denied Splunge’s motion without comment. Ordinarily the trial court is given wide latitude in determining whether the prosecutor has exercised peremptory challenges in a racially discriminatory fashion.
Batson,
Given the nature of venireman Clark’s prior contact with Splunge, the court could permissibly conclude that the prosecutor did not exercise that peremptory challenge in an unconstitutional manner. “The prosecutor’s explanation need not rise to the level of justifying exercise of a challenge for cause.”
Batson,
However, we agree with the district court’s judgment that the prosecutor’s challenge of Ms. Brodie did violate constitutional requirements. The prosecutor’s explanation was insufficient to rebut Splunge’s prima facie case regarding the challenge exercised against Ms. Brodie. The record reveals no evidence whatsoever that she did not understand the standard of proof to be applied in a criminal case—the reason now advanced for upholding her exclusion. Indeed, the only voir dire questions the prosecutor asked her regarding the level of scrutiny she would apply in the case were the previously mentioned race-based questions and the question: “If the State proves its case to you beyond a reasonable doubt, would you find the defen
*709
dant guilty?” To which question, Brodie answered “Yes.” R.95-96. The State asked the identical question to at least one other potential juror who also answered “Yes.” Despite her identical answer, this latter member of the venire was not challenged. R.81. In fact, the venire members’ answers to this question were almost uniform. R.80 (Michels), R.81 (Cobb), R.85 (Toone), R.88-89 (Hankins), R.145 (Smith), R.147 (Wells), R.150 (Joharm), R.151 (Slu-der), R.174 (Huffman). Yet, non-black potential jurors who answered the question identically were deemed fit for jury service. Even though the prosecutor only asked Brodie her understanding of proof beyond a reasonable doubt through this cursory question, the prosecutor struck her because she allegedly did not understand that standard! As Chief Justice Shepard of the Indiana Supreme Court noted, “[Brodie’s] answers during voir dire * * * do not seem to demonstrate a basis for such an assertion.”
Although this case may be a “close call,” id., it is not so because some evidence supports the prosecutor’s explanation for exercising his peremptory challenge of Ms. Brodie on the basis given and some evidence suggests that the explanation is pre-textual. Instead, this case is a close call because all of the evidence suggests that the prosecutor’s explanation as to the exclusion of Ms. Brodie was a pretext for race-based discrimination and yet we are meant to be deferential to the trial court’s contrary findings. Because Indiana waived the presumption of correctness under § 2254(d), we agree with the district court’s finding of intentional discrimination vis-a-vis Ms. Brodie and need not opine on the outcome of the case if Indiana had not made such a concession.
A prosecutor’s explanation may not be sustained where discriminatory intent is inherent in the explanation. Respondents assert that the prosecutor’s explanation, “as opposed to his motives or intent,” must be race neutral (Br. 7). But they entirely miss the point of the Batson analysis. A race-neutral explanation is required precisely because race-neutral intent in striking potential jurors is required. Where the prosecutor’s neutral explanation is an obvious mask for a race-based challenge, the prosecutor has not met his burden under Batson. Indiana has not carried that burden with respect to its challenge against Ms. Brodie.
Under the Fourteenth Amendment, a prosecutor may not exercise even a single peremptory challenge if through that challenge he intentionally discriminates on the basis of race. See
United States v. Chalan,
B. Prosecutorial Misconduct
Because the district court’s judgment is being upheld, the magnitude of the prosecutor’s trial misconduct need not be addressed. In his opening statement the prosecutor summarized the coming testimony of Tara Fox, a participant in Splunge’s offenses, incriminating Splunge. Moreover *710 he tendered into evidence a written signed statement Fox had given to the police. The trial judge admitted this document into evidence over the strong objections of Splunge’s counsel based on the prosecutor’s express assurances that he would put Fox on the witness stand. Yet he did not call her as a witness. We are confident that the prosecutor and the trial court will ensure that this troubling trial error will not reoccur at Splunge’s retrial.
III.
The district court observed that “[tjhis petitioner deserves the writ, but he also deserves to be retried” (Memorandum Opinion and Order (quoting
Dudley v. Duckworth,
Notes
. A more detailed account of the facts is contained in
Splunge v. State,
