MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The matter before the Court stems from the conduct of counsel for the City of Bridgeport (“City”) during jury selection on October 7, 1986. While selecting juries in three civil rights cases brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, the defendants City and named police officers used their peremptory challenges to strike every black citizen otherwise available to serve on the juries selected in each of three cases. The Court on October 8, 1986, having heard from counsel in each case, struck the three juries selected and assessed court costs and, upon proper application, attorneys’ fees against the City of Bridgeport. In so doing, the Court cited,
inter alia, Batson v. Kentucky,
— U.S. —,
On October 7, 1986, the Court conducted general voir dire for purposes of jury selection in Vallorie Clark v. City of Bridgeport, et al., B-83-514 (“Clark”), Richard Rizzoli v. Reynaldo Muniz, et al., B-86-115 (“Rizzoli”), and Benjamin Simmons, et al. v. John Formichella, et al., B-86-119 (“Simmons”). Following specific voir dire questions in Clark and challenges for cause, the courtroom deputy selected at random the names of sixteen prospective jurors, including three blacks, from which the petit jury and two alternates would be selected. 1 The parties then exercised their peremptory challenges with the defendants exercising their challenges to exclude all three of the blacks. A jury of six and two alternates were then selected for Clark which was scheduled to proceed to trial the following morning at 10:00 A.M.
Jury selection for Rizzoli next began with the same counsel as in Clark, at least for purposes of jury selection. Prior to arriving at a jury in Rizzoli, plaintiff’s counsel, on the record at sidebar and in defense counsel’s presence, indicated that in Clark the defendants had exercised their first three peremptory challenges to exclude the only three blacks among the six *892 teen prospective jurors whose names had been randomly drawn from the wheel. Counsel further indicated his client, Vallorie Clark, is black. The Court instructed counsel to file whatever he wished and stated, “[a]nd we’ll deal with it before 10 o’clock [tomorrow]. We’ll deal with it.”
Following further voir dire and challenges for cause in Rizzoli, sixteen names, including that of one black, were selected from the wheel. In exercising the defendants’ peremptory challenges, the assistant City attorney excluded the black prospective juror from jury service. The plaintiff in Rizzoli is white.
The Court then proceeded with jury selection in
Simmons,
a ease in which the Court had, on June 16, 1986, dismissed the
Monell
count.
2
See Monell v. Dept. of Social Services,
On October 8, 1986, counsel for each of the three cases and the jurors for Clark appeared, with trial in Clark scheduled to commence at 10:00 A.M. Out of the jury’s presence, the Court, as it had indicated it would do on October 7, 1986, considered whether any of the three trials should go forward in light of the City’s apparent systematic exclusion of black jurors from each of the three juries. The Court stated:
And with an eye to the equal protection clause, both as it applies to the plaintiffs and to the jurors, and to my inherent supervisory powers, and after researching the law at some length yesterday and checking what actually did occur as a matter of record in the jury strikes, the exercise of peremptory challenges, I have determined that it is incumbent upon the City of Bridgeport through its counsel to articulate acceptable reasons for the exercise of its challenges.
Tr. at 2.
The Court then directed the parties' attention to such relevant caselaw as
King v. County of Nassau,
On the record here ... I find and conclude that the striking of eight out of eight available black jurors in the course of jury selection yesterday morning shifts the burden of proof to the defense to articulate a neutral explanation relating to the challenge of each of those jurors with regard to the cases in which they were challenged. The reasons stated on the record yesterday, and I have caused that record to be typed in pertinent part, may be adequate as to one of the jurors challenged in the Simmons case, but a party cannot justify its allegedly discriminatory exercise of challenges by claims of good faith, a lack of discriminatory motive, or that black jurors will be partial to the other party. And that’s the law. I’ll be glad to hear from you, sir.
Tr. at 4. The assistant City attorney responded that he was well aware of the oral motion made on October 7, 1986 pertaining to the defendants’ peremptory challenges of blacks and proceeded to explain why such peremptory challenges were so exercised. In so doing, the assistant City attorney remarked “I personally have knowledge of what the feeling in the city, that permeates the city with its minority population, is and the municipal government and the police department.” Tr. at 6. Although he may have attempted to set forth acceptable reasons for the City’s and named defendants’ peremptory challenges of three of the black prospective jurors, 3 he continued:
I prefer and thought that my client would get a much fairer trial if I could get people who came from surrounding circumstances and who had no feeling of kinship by race, color or creed____ [I]t looks like a pervasive pattern, I can’t deny that we did it, I’m not going to sit here and say we did it, you know, but I’m sure if you had twenty more blacks on that panel, we would have had to accept black people. We would have to make a choice of which black people would we— would have given us a better and fairer trial. For example, if I had a black person who lived in Fairfield as compared to a black person who lived in Bridgeport on that panel, I probably would have knocked the black person from Bridgeport off and retained the one from Fair-field. Because the atmosphere that prevails in this city which I know exists, that’s it. I have no other defense. I knocked them off. Yes, I did. I used my peremptory challenges, ... But it’s so terribly unfair to pick on one segment of the population and tell us, oh, you were pervasive. It was designed. You knocked them all off____ I can’t give you any other argument. We did it. It’s obvious what we did.
Tr. at 11, 12, 13.
The assistant City attorney further stated that the prospective jurors were “knocked off” because he didn’t think they would give him a fair trial, they were biased, and he thought they would show prejudice. Tr. at 13-14. The Court notes that the record during voir dire is devoid of any evidence *894 which might support such statements. When asked whether he had empirical data, he responded, “I don’t have any empirical data. All I can tell you is I trust my instincts.” 4 Tr. at 16. The assistant City attorney also cited in support of the challenges the fact that black plaintiffs are involved. Tr. at 14.
The Court allowed the City attorney following plaintiffs' counsels' remarks another opportunity to speak at which time he stated:
[I]f I had a choice between a white juror and a black juror under the facts of these cases, I’m going to take a white juror. That’s what I’m saying____ [W]hy should I put my city and my defendants at the mercy of the people in my opinion who make the most civil rights claims, at least in my experience____ But I’ve been honest with your Honor. I told you exactly why I kept those people off the jury.
Tr. at 27-29.
The Court, having undertaken the difficult task of determining invidious intent in light of the record as a whole and the relevant caselaw set forth below, finds that the defendants exercised their peremptory challenges to exclude at least seven of the eight black prospective jurors from jury service simply because they are black. As stated in open court on October 8, 1986, such exercise of one’s peremptory challenges is constitutionally impermissible.
The peremptory challenge, characterized long ago by Coke and Blackstone as a necessary component of a trial by jury in both civil and criminal cases,
Carr v. Watts,
Although one is not entitled to a trial of his cause before a petit jury composed in whole or in part of persons of his own race,
see, e.g., Batson,
*895
It appears, at least from the cases reported, that when protection from discrimination in the jury selection process has been sought by an individual party, he almost invariably has been a criminal defendant.
5
See, e.g., Batson,
The Supreme Court, in evaluating the propriety of the systematic exclusion of daily wage earners from a venire, stated:
The American tradition of trial by jury, considered in connection with either criminal or civil proceedings, necessarily contemplates an impartial jury drawn from a cross-section of the community.
Thiel v. Southern Pacific Co.,
those eligible for jury service are to be found in every stratum of society. Jury competence is an individual rather than a group or class matter. That fact lies at the very heart of the jury system. To disregard it is to open the door to class distinctions and discriminations which are abhorrent to the democratic ideals of trial by jury.
Id.
at 220,
Congress, as well, has indicated that the jury selection process in both civil and criminal cases is to be colorblind. 28 U.S.C. § 1862 provides:
No citizen shall be excluded from service as a grand or petit juror in the district courts of the United States or in the Court of International Trade on account *896 of race, color, religion, sex, national origin, or economic status.
The purpose of the Act
is to provide improved judicial machinery for the selection, without discrimination, of Federal grand and petit juries. Its aim is to assure all litigants that potential jurors will be selected at random from a representative cross section of the community and that all qualified citizens will have the opportunity to be considered for jury service.
H.R.REP. NO. 1076, 90th Cong., 2d Sess.,
reprinted in
1968 U.S. CODE CONG. & ADMIN. NEWS 1792,
quoted in United States v.
Torquato,
Although 28 U.S.C. § 1862 is inapplicable to the instant case, in that it deals with the judicial machinery used to arrive at the venire, the statute evinces a clear Congressional policy that all citizens shall have the right to be considered for jury service and all litigants shall have the right to have these citizens so considered without regard to their race. These rights begin with the court officials’ selection of the venire and continue through the litigants’ selection of the petit jury. No reason appears why such rights should not be available in both civil and criminal cases, and especially where, as here, there has been state action to exclude through the use of peremptory challenges every black prospective juror available for jury service in each of the three cases.
Misuse of the peremptory challenge to exclude black jurors has become both common and flagrant____ Yet the Equal Protection Clause prohibits a State from taking any action based on crude, inaccurate racial stereotypes — even an action that does not serve the State’s interests. Exclusion of blacks from a jury, solely because of race, can no more be justified by a belief that blacks are less likely than whites to consider fairly or sympathetically the State’s case against a black [litigant] than it can be justified by the notion that blacks lack the “intelligence, experience, or moral integrity” to be entrusted with that role.
Batson,
While the exercise of peremptories by the State
qua
litigant is presumed to be motivated toward the end of a fair trial, the presumption dissipates where, as here, there appears as a result of their exercise a pervasive pattern of systematic exclusion of blacks from the jury.
Swain,
A finding of the invidious intent of the City may be based on direct or circumstantial evidence,
Village of Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan Hous. Dev. Corp.,
Through the series of jury selections in
Clark, Simmons,
and
Rizzoli,
defendants employed their peremptories to exclude each black whose name was drawn from the wheel, resulting in an all white jury in each of the three cases. Such exclusion may in and of itself establish a
prima facie
case of discrimination in the selection process.
See Castaneda v. Partida,
A violation of the Equal Protection clause is also more problematic in
Rizzoli
because the plaintiff, a white person, is not a member of any cognizable group victimized by discrimination.
See Castaneda,
*898
Since a
prima facie
case has been found, the burden shifts to the assistant City attorney to come forward with neutral explanations for challenging the black jurors.
Batson,
For the most part, counsel for defendants conceded his purpose for employing the peremptories which the Court finds was discriminatory. In two instances, however, counsel proffered explanations for his challenges. The striking of Mrs. Costa may be acceptable in Simmons, because the incident complained of occurred within the housing project in which she resides. Yet the exclusion of Mr. Jenkins based upon his affiliation with an international organization of police chiefs and the exclusion of Mrs. Costa in Rizzoli are found to be merely pretextual and not nearly sufficient to survive this Court’s inquiry. To the extent that counsel attempted to articulate any other explanations, see supra notes 2-3, those too are unpersuasive. Counsel stated that if he had a choice between a white juror and a black juror under the facts of these cases, he would take a white juror. Tr. at 27. The Court concludes that counsel, through his peremptory challenges, exercised this choice in precisely the repugnant manner precluded by the fourteenth amendment’s Equal Protection clause. Accordingly, the juries are dismissed. The above-captioned cases shall be placed on this Court’s November, 1986 calendar. Court costs and attorneys’ fees, upon a proper application to be filed by October 28, 1986, are assessed against the defendants.
It is SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The courtroom deputy places the names of all those present for jury duty, except the names of those individuals who have been successfully challenged for cause or otherwise excused, in a wheel. She then randomly selects sixteen names from the wheel from which a trial jury and alternates will be selected.
. The assistant City attorney, in attempting to justify a peremptory challenge in Simmons based upon the City being named as a defendant, represented that he was unaware the Monell count against the City of Bridgeport had been dismissed. The Court finds this representation unfathomable in light of the circumstances surrounding the dismissal. The City attorney’s office received a copy of the Court’s ruling dismissing the Monell count. That ruling required plaintiffs counsel to file with the Court a letter outlining the various pleading requirements for a Monell count. The Court, by margin endorsement, did not accept plaintiff’s first letter in this regard, because there was no indication opposing counsel had been served. Opposing counsel, the City attorney’s office, received a copy of this endorsement. Plaintiffs counsel then refiled the letter, indicating opposing counsel, the City attorney, had been served. Not only should the assistant City attorney have been aware from these circumstances that the Monell count is no longer in the case, but presumably any attorney representing a municipality and municipal employees would know on the eve of trial whether municipal liability is in fact in issue.
. The assistant City attorney explained, for example, that he would prefer jurors who do not live in Bridgeport. One of the black prospective jurors the assistant City attorney excluded, however, resides in Stratford while the assistant City attorney failed to exclude in Rizzoli one white prospective juror who resides in Bridgeport. The Court, therefore, gives little weight to this explanation, especially since the assistant City attorney in Rizolli used only three of his peremptory challenges, stating that he "waived the fourth because [he] felt all the other jurors were proper.” Tr. at 12.
The assistant City attorney also attempted an explanation for his peremptory challenge of Mr. Jenkins, also black, stating that Mr. Jenkins belonged to an international organization of police chiefs. The Court discredits this explanation, as well, absent some reasoning as to why a lawyer representing law enforcement officials would not want a prospective juror associated with a law enforcement organization on the jury. It is clear from the record as a whole that the assistant City attorney’s primary motivation for striking Mr. Jenkins was that he is black.
.
See Batson v. Kentucky,
. One civil case involving the alleged discriminatory use of peremptories,
Esposito v. Buonome, et. al.,
. That the assistant City attorney has taken official action acting in his official capacity in the representation of the City of Bridgeport and or its employees cannot be disputed.
See Columbus Bd. of Ed. v. Pencik,
. At least one state court under its state constitution has addressed the propriety in civil cases of exercising peremptory challenges to exclude prospective jurors based solely upon group bias. In
Holley v. J & S Sweeping Co.,
