Ex parte Terry BIRD.
(Re Terry Bird v. State of Alabama).
Ex parte Jacob WARNER.
(Re Jacob Warner v. State of Alabama).
Supreme Court of Alabama.
*677 Jeffery C. Duffey, Montgomery, for petitioner Terry Bird.
Richard D. Shinbaum of Shinbaum, Thiemonge & Howell, Montgomery, for petitioner Jacob Warner.
Dоn Siegelman, Atty. Gen., and Beth Slate Poe, Asst. Atty. Gen., for respondent.
James H. Evans, Atty. Gen., and Frances H. Smith, Asst. Atty. Gen., for respondent on rehearing.
*678 ON APPLICATION FOR REHEARING
ADAMS, Justice.
The opinion of June 14, 1991, is withdrawn and the following is substituted therefor.
Terry Bird and Jacob Warner appealed convictions of capital murder. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. See Bird v. State, [Ms.
In the trial of these defendants' consolidated cases, the chief deputy district attorney for Montgomery County, Ellen Brooks, and Deputy District Attorney Bruce Maddox used 17 of their 20 peremptory strikes to eliminate 17 of the 19 black veniremembers. The defendant struck 1, thus leaving only 1 black veniremember to serve on the jury. Before the jury was sworn, both defendants moved to quash the jury panel on the ground that the State's use of its peremptory strikes violated the principles expressed in Batson v. Kentucky,
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 93: She expressed reservations about the death penalty.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 83: She expressed reservations about the death penalty. "Her husband was employed by the ABC Board. The district attorney's office had recently prosecute[d] regarding the ABC Board."
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 87: He expressed reservations about the death penalty. He also "had a paternity case with family court." Because he was 78 years old, he might be adversely affected by the length of the trial and the "gory" photographs it involved.[1]
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 1: He was a minister who indicated that he knew Warner and expressed reservations about the death penalty. One of his eyes did not seem to focus properly.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 75: She worked in a deрartment store where a member of the district attorney's staff had formerly worked. The staff member indicated that Number 75 was suspected of shoplifting. She was 19 years old and one of the defendants was 22.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 31: He had been charged with possession of marijuana. He indicated that he "had heard of Mr. Shinbaum," attorney for Mr. Warner.[2]
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 113: She was a teacher and her husband was unemployed. She once had a student named Eloise Warner, the present name of defendant Warner's wife.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 97: He was 73 years old, did not raise his hand for the administration of the oath, and had difficulty hearing "low voices."
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 27: She was 24 years old and lived in a highcrime area. She had a "negotiating a worthless instrument conviction" and did not respond to a question in general voir dire regarding misdemeanor convictions. Her last name was the same as that of *679 an individual once prosecuted by the district attorney's office.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 37: She "had a disorderly conduct charge." On the written questionnaire, she "clearly and forcefully stated" that she knew none of the "attorneys or the defendants or their families," but did not indicate whether she knew the victim.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 45: She was married to an assistant basketball coach who was employed by Alabama State University. The University had been under investigation by the White Collar Crime Unit. The district attorney's office had recently prosecuted someone connected with the University.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 96: He was 28 years old, "single, and self-employed as a private duty nurse." Moreover, personal observation of him [indicated] that he had tendencies of being homosexual." The case involved some evidence of homosexual activity and the prosecutrix thought that he might know some of the witnesses.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 33: She had once served on a jury in a criminal case that was subsequently dismissed. She had "difficulty in talking" and seemed to be unfamiliar with the term "shoplifting."
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 26: She lived in a "high crime" area. Her last name was the same as that of an individual once prosecuted by the district attorney's office.
VENIREMEMBER NUMBER 76: She was 26 years old, lived in an apartment in a "high-crime" area, and worked as a cashier.
The trial judge, after cross-examination of Ms. Brooks by defense counsel, expressed some concern over the challenges of Veniremembers 26 and 45. Ultimately, however, he concluded that to grant the defendants' motion to quash the jury panel placed "too great of a burden on the State in explaining its reasons" for its challenges. He, therefore, denied the motion on the grounds that the prosecution's explanations were sufficiently race-neutral and that Bird lacked standing to challenge the exclusion of black veniremembers.
We take this opportunity to underscore the rule and policies that we announced in Jackson and Ex parte Branch,
"The burden of persuasion is initially on the party alleging discriminatory use of peremptory challenges to establish a prima facie case of discrimination. In determining whether there is a prima facie case, the court is to consider `all relevant circumstances' which could lead to an inference of discrimination. See Batson,476 U.S. at 93 ,106 S.Ct. at 1721 , citing Washington v. Davis,426 U.S. 229 , 239-42,96 S.Ct. 2040 , 2047-48,48 L.Ed.2d 597 (1976). The following are illustrative of the types of evidence that can be used to raise the inference of discrimination:
"1. Evidence that the `jurors in question share[d] only this one characteristictheir membership in the groupand that in all other respects they [were] as heterogeneous as the community as a whole.' [People v.] Wheeler, 22 Cal.3d [258] at 280, 583 P.2d [748] at 764, 148 Cal.Rptr. [890] at 905 [(1978)]. For instance `it may be significant that the persons challenged, although all black, include both men and wоmen and are [of] a variety of ages, occupations, and social or economic conditions,' Wheeler,22 Cal.3d at 280 ,583 P.2d at 764 [, n. 27],148 Cal.Rptr. at 905, n. 27 , indicating that race was the deciding factor.
"2. A pattern of strikes against black jurors on the particular venire; e.g., 4 of 6 peremptory challenges were used to strike black jurors. Batson,476 U.S. at 97 ,106 S.Ct. at 1723 .
"3. The past conduct of the state's attorney in using peremptory challenges to strike all blacks from the jury venire.
*680 Swain [v. Alabama,380 U.S. 202 ,85 S.Ct. 824 ,13 L.Ed.2d 759 (1965)].
"4. The type and manner of the state's attorney's questions and statements during voir dire, including nothing more than desultory voir dire. Batson,476 U.S. at 97 ,106 S.Ct. at 1723 ; Wheeler,22 Cal.3d at 281 ,583 P.2d at 764 ,148 Cal.Rptr. at 905 .
"5. The type and manner of questions directed to the challenged juror, including a lack of questions, or a lack of meaningful questions. Slappy v. State,503 So.2d 350 , 355 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1987); People v. Turner,42 Cal.3d 711 ,726 P.2d 102 ,230 Cal.Rptr. 656 (1986); People v. Wheeler,22 Cal.3d 258 ,583 P.2d 748 , 764,148 Cal.Rptr. 890 (1978).
"6. Disparate treatment of members of the jury venire with the same characteristics, or who answer a question in the same or similar mаnner; e.g., in Slappy, a black elementary school teacher was struck as being potentially too liberal because of his job, but a white elementary school teacher was not challenged. Slappy,503 So.2d at 352 and 355.
"7. Disparate examination of members of the venire; e.g., in Slappy, a question designed to provoke a certain response that is likely to disqualify a juror was asked to black jurors, but not to white jurors. Slappy,503 So.2d at 355 .
"8. Circumstantial evidence of intent may be proven by disparate impact where all or most of the challenges were used to strike blacks from the jury. Batson,476 U.S. at 93 ,106 S.Ct. at 1721 ; Washington v. Davis,426 U.S. at 242 ,96 S.Ct. at 2049 .
"9. The state used peremptory challenges to dismiss all or most black jurors. See Slappy,503 So.2d at 354 , Turner, supra.
"After a prima facie case is established, there is a presumption that the peremptory challenges wеre used to discriminate against black jurors. Batson,476 U.S. at 97 ,106 S.Ct. at 1723 . The state then has the burden of articulating a clear, specific, and legitimate reason for the challenge which relates to the particular case to be tried, and which is nondiscriminatory. Batson,476 U.S. at 97 ,106 S.Ct. at 1723 ."
Ex parte Branch,
This catalog of factors is illustrative only and not exhaustive. Harrell v. State,
It follows, therefore, that the strength of the defendant's prima facie case depends, in large part, on the number of these factors present. Although a prima facie case is always rebuttable, the existence of a number of suspicious factors requires a more cogent explanation in rebuttal. Consequently, the burden of production, which shifts to the State once a prima facie case has been presented, increases in proportion to the strength of the defendant's prima facie case. In other words, a "weak prima facie case may be rebutted more readily than a strong one." Gamble v. State,
In this case, the venire consisted of 52 prospective jurors. The 19 black veniremembers comprised 36% of the venire. However, the fact that only one black juror was ultimately seated on the jury meant that blacks comprised only 8% of the trial jury. This fact alone reveals a disparate impact and immediately arouses suspicion of the existence of disсriminatory intent. See Branch,
Here, however, the suspicion of discriminatory intent raisеd by the disparately meager representation of black jurors is convincingly reinforced by the fact that the prosecutrix used 85% of her peremptory challenges, that is, 17 of 20 strikes, to eliminate 89% of the black veniremembers. See Branch,
Moreover, the prosecutrix struck black veniremembers but received without challenge white jurors having characteristics similar to those of the black members whom she challenged. She struck veniremember number 33 because she had once served on a jury in a criminal cаse that had been dismissed but did not challenge veniremember number 39 who had served on a criminal case in which the defendant was acquitted. She struck veniremember number 97, who was 73 years old, citing concern about his age in relationship to the length of the trial. She also struck veniremember number 87, again citing concern about the length of the trial and the gruesome nature of some photographs; she did not, however, challenge juror number 103, who was 74 years old. Such disparate treatment furnishes strong evidence of discriminatory intent. See Ex parte Lynn,
Also relevant is what appears to be a pattern in the use of peremptory strikes by the Montgomery County District Attorney's office. As the Court of Criminal Appeals and the defendants point out, this issue has reached the appellate level in a number of cases from Montgomery County. See Parker v. State,
A number of those cases, like this one, were prosecuted by Bruce Maddox and Ellen Brooks. For example, in Parker, Mr. Maddox used 75% of his peremptory challenges (6 of 8 strikes) to eliminate black veniremembers. In Leonard, Mr. Maddox used 80% of his peremptory challenges (8 of 10 strikes) to remove black veniremembers. In Williams v. State,
An example of what appears to be a systematic practice of discrimination is a relevant factor to be considered both at the trial level and on review in assessing the strength of the defendant's prima facie case. Swain v. Alabama,
This evidence, in conjunction with the disparate impact of the peremptory strikes in this case, clearly supports the defendants' contentions and raises an inference *682 of discriminatory intent. The burden having shifted to the State to rebut the inference, the prosecutors' proffered explanations for their strikes must be examined in light of a particularly strong prima facie case. It thus became the prosecution's burden to articulate justifications for its strikes that were clear, cogent, and pertinent to the facts of this particular case. Branch,
After the defendants moved to quash the jury panel, the State offered grounds for its challenge of veniremember number 26 for the record. During that hearing, this colloquy followed:
"MR. BLANCHARD: [Defense] As to juror Number 26, P.B., I believe you stated that the rationale for striking this juror was that she lives on Clanton Avenue?
"MS. BROOKS: That was part of it, yes.
"MR. BLANCHARD: Which you identified as a `high-crime area'?
"MS. BROOKS: Yes sir. We had some difficulties in that area.
MR. BLANCHARD: You don't know whether your office has ever prosecuted Mrs. B., do you?
"MS. BROOKS: No sir. I believe I stated previously that we have prosecuted another person named B. and that name is a little bit unusual to me, and it immediately came to my mind and I made a note of [it] before we got going good.
"MR. BLANCHARD: Weren't there a number of other people in the courtroom today, potential jurors that had names the same as people your office prosecuted?
"MS. BROOKS: I'm sure there were.
"MR. BLANCHARD: Well, were they?
"MS. BROOKS: I'm sure there were. I don't know, I tried to make a note whenever I recognized anything that could be similar.
"MR. BLANCHARD: Do you know if there were people whom you decided not to strike who had names the same as other people that your office has prosecuted?
"MS. BROOKS: I recall every time that it came to my mind or one of cocounsel for the State, that we discussed it, and I believe we struck everyone we thought had a connection to someone we had prosecuted.
"MR. BLANCHARD: Well, the question is not a connection but the same name. Do you routinely strike people that have the same name?
"MS. BROOKS: No, sir. I consider the area the person is living, age, race, sex."
The bare allegation that a veniremember lives in a "high crime" area is also constitutionally deficient. Williams v. State,
There was no showing, nor does it logically appear, why this particular veniremember would be less inclined toward the prosecution simply because she lived on Clanton Avenue. Thus, Ms. Brooks's perfunctory remarks regarding the residence of veniremember number 26 fail to set forth an acceptable raсe-neutral justification for this challenge.
Although age was not cited as a specific rationale for striking this particular veniremember, we realize that in certain cases age may serve as a legitimate racially *683 neutral reason for a peremptory strike. See Harrell,
Finally, the failure of the State to engage in any meaningful voir dire on a subject of alleged cоncern is evidence that the explanation is a sham and a pretext for discrimination. Branch,
Here, a simple question directed to the veniremember could have dispelled any doubt about a possible relationship. However, neither the State nor the court engaged in any voir dire on this subject. In the absence of any examination, the trial judge had nothing on which to make the required "sincere and reasonable effort to evaluate the evidence and explanations based on the circumstances as he [knew] them." Branch,
We thus conclude that none of the explanations proffered by the State for its challenge of veniremember number 26 is sufficient to rebut the strong inference of discrimination evident in this case. The State may not cure the constitutional deficiency of an explanation simply by augmenting it with similar excuses none of which, standing alone, would be sufficient. This bootstrapping procedure amounts to nothing more than a summary denial of discriminatory intent. Because it falls far short of a "clear, specific, and legitimate reason for the challenge," it will not suffice to rebut a prima facie case of discrimination. Branch,
Although one unconstitutional peremptory strike requires reversal and a new trial, we take this opportunity to accentuate the specific weaknesses of the State's explanations regarding a number of its challenges. In doing so, we point out that the State's failure to articulate a legitimate reason for its challenge of veniremember number 26 exposes its rationale for subsequent strikes to greater scrutiny. See State v. Antwine,
"The explanation offered for striking each black juror must be evaluated in light of the explanations offered for the prosecutor's other peremptory strikes, and as well, in light of the strength of the prima facie case. The persuasiveness of a proffered explanation may be magnified or diminished by the persuasiveness of companion explanations, and by the strength of the prima facie case."
Gamble v. State,
The prosecutrix conceded that she found it difficult to articulate valid justifications for her peremptory challenge of veniremember number 76. On direct examination, she answered as follows:
"MR. MADDOX: [For the State] All right, would you tell the court what factors went into your determination to strike juror No. 76?
*684 "MS. BROOKS: Yes, sir. Juror Number 76 [was] P.R. According to my notes, [she] is 26 years of age, lives in an apartment, has a college degree, but yet is just a cashier at a finance kind of company. I had that she was employed in another capacity, and I didn'tmine was for data entry, and I felt like that there was some concern there that perhaps she was not using her degree, and I was concerned frankly that she may have had problems at work.
"MR. MADDOX: All right.
"MS. BROOKS: It appeared to me that she was underemployed for her position. Also her age concerned me, and the fact that she was living in an apartment on South Perry Street. I live in an apartment. I'm not against people that do that but this particular address has had some difficulties. In fact there was a shooting, as I recall, not too long ago in some apartments on Perry Street.
"MR. MADDOX: Did you discuss that matter with co-counsel?
"MS. BROOKS: Certainly.
"MR. MADDOX: Did co-counsel indicate to you one of those intangible feelings you described earlier called a `gut reaction' about that particular juror?
"MS. BROOKS: This one is more particularly hard to articulate. I remember seeing her out in the venire, and it was somewhat difficult for me in discussing it with you, to articulate all of my reasons. But there was just something nagging at me about her, her job incongruity there."
Cross-examination developed the following:
"MR. BLANCHARD: No. 76, P.R., I believe you enunciated your rationale that she was not using her degree to full potential; you said there was something about a gut reaction, plus she lived on South Perry Street, and it appeared to you she was underemployed?
"MS. BROOKS: Yeah, do you get what I'm saying?
"MR. BLANCHARD: No.
"MS. BROOKS: Something bothers me about that. It's hard to articulate that, but it's likeI don't knowit's kind of like having a law degree, and you know, being a soda jerk kind of рerson. There is nothing wrong with that, I'm not saying she's a bad person, but it struck me as unusual, and, being suspicious, I wondered if something may have happened at her job. As I mentioned, I showed she was a data entry person, and, she statedand I wrote, cashier. And I wondered what happened there.
MR. BLANCHARD: You don't have any specific knowledge about anything having happened on her job; is that correct?
"MS. BROOKS: I don't call up the employers, no sir.
"MR. BLANCHARD: You don't know how long she's had her degree, do you?
"MS. BROOKS: No sir. I could guess because I think she's about 26. But I don't know.
"MR. BLANCHARD: Or what efforts she's made to utilize her degree, you don't know anything about that?
"MS. BROOKS: No."
Such unarticulated "gut feelings" about a veniremember will not rebut a Branch challenge. Accord United States v. Horsley,
By now, the Stаte is well aware of the fact that it will be called upon to justify its peremptory challenges. Consequently, it elicits no surprise that a seasoned prosecutor could muster a colorably race-neutral explanation. DevelopmentsRace And The Criminal Process, 101 Harv.L.Rev. 1472, 1581 (1988). Thus, the inability of the prosecutrix to articulate more convincing reasons for this strike is particularly revealing.
The State's expressed concern about this veniremember's employment is unsatisfactory for two reasons. First, there is no showing, nor does it logically follow, how her use or nonuse of a degree relates to the *685 facts or issues in this particular case. See Branch,
Because we conclude that the State has also failed to overcome the inference of discriminatory intent with respect to its challenge of veniremembers 26 and 76, explanations given by the State for its other challenges must be viewed with a greater degree of caution. In additiоn to the age and neighborhood explanations just discussed, we are concerned with a number of other explanations, such as the "body language" rationale given for the challenge of veniremember number 96, and with the "communication difficulty" expressed as one reason for the exclusion of veniremember number 33. Both of these explanations are especially subject to abuse because of their insusceptibility to an objective evaluation by the trial judge. See C E J v. State,
This case represents another instancе where the State has unnecessarily jeopardized a prosecution by interjecting the impermissible element of racial bias. Disregard for the "red flag" raised by Justice Jones in Lynn,
The defendants' motion to quash the jury panel should have been granted. In view of the strength of the defendants' prima facie case and the failure of the State to come forward with clear, cogent explanations in rebuttal, the trial judge's denial of that motion was clearly erroneous.
Standing
The Court of Criminal Appeals held that defendant Bird, a Caucasian, lacked standing to contest the State's use of peremptory strikes to eliminate blacks from the trial jury. It reasoned that a defendant must be a member of the same "cognizable minority" as the excluded juror in order to challenge the State's peremptory strikes under the narrow holding of Batson v. Kentucky,
While Bird's case was under consideration before this Court, the United States Supreme Court decided Powers v. Ohio, ___ U.S. ___,
Although it is now clear that Bird has standing under the Fourteenth Amendment to challenge the peremptory strikes of blacks from the trial jury, hе also has standing under adequate and independent state law grounds, including the Constitution and statutes of Alabama and this state's declared policy against racial discrimination in jury selection. In Ex parte Jackson,
Section 6, in terms similar to its counterpart in U.S. Const. amend. VI,[4] guarantees that "in all criminal prosecutions, the accused has a right to ... a speedy, public trial, by an impartial jury of the county or district in which the offense was committed." (Emphasis added.) Section 6, thus, requires an "impartial jury," that is, a "`body [that is] truly representative of the community' and not the organ of any special group or class." Glasser v. United States,
Consistent with this understanding of § 6 guarantees, the Alabama legislature, in 1978, renovated this state's jury selection procedures through Act No. 594. Section one of the Act declared:
"It is the policy of this state that all persons selected for jury service be selected at random from a fair cross section of the population of the area served by the court and that all qualified citizens have the opportunity in accordance with this act to be considered for jury service in this state and an obligation to serve as jurors when summoned for that purpose."
Acts 1978, No. 594, p. 712 (codified at Ala. Code 1975, § 12-16-55) (emphasis added). This "`fair cross section' requirement ... is analogous to the requirement, derived from the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, ... that `petit juries must be drawn from a source fairly representative of the community.'" Rayburn v. State,
Racial discrimination in selection of the jury venire is particularly obnoxious for two reasons. First, it denies the defendant the benefit of a constituency based upon diversitya concept central to the American experience. By maximizing diversity, the "preconceptions" and "biases" of the representative factions, "to the extent they are antagonistic, will tend to cancel each other out." People v. Wheeler,
Second, the continued viability of our way of life depends, in large part, upon our ability to involve all segments of society in the fundamental institutions of the body politic, not the least of the which is our judicial system. Cf. Powers, ___ U.S. at ___-___,
In Ex parte Branch,
"We believe that the Legislature intended, in adopting this public policy, that our trial juries should be selected from a list which contains a fair cross section of the area served by the court, and that any form of discrimination against a particular juror on account of race ... is prohibited, and if liberally interpreted to apply to the State's use of peremptories, the state policy is not inconsistent with Batson or Jackson requirements."
Id. at 619 (emphasis added). Consistent with that statement is this Court's longstanding policy of construing the "fundamental rights" provisions of Ala. Const. art. I "liberally ... in favor of the citizen." See Davis v. State,
Indeed, the foregoing discussion regarding the rationale and policies against racial discrimination in the selection of the venire applies as cogently in respect to the impermissibly arbitrary and capricious exclusion of members of a cognizable racial group through the use of peremptory strikes. Conferring standing upon a defendant to challenge such discrimination regardless of his race most assuredly serves to facilitate those policies. The defendant suffers a deprivation of rights guaranteed under the Constitution and laws of this state whenever he is subjected to a judicial procedure that has been tainted by invidious racial discrimination at any stage of the jury selection. The guarantees that surround the jury selection process at the threshold stage should not disappear during voir dire, the stage that bears most directly upon the defendant and upon the trial process. See Fields v. People,
A number of sister States have reached similar results based upon the protections secured by the "impartial jury" guarantees embodied in their respеctive constitutions. For example, in People v. Wheeler,
"It is that degree of representativenesswhatever it may prove to bethat we can and must preserve as essential to trial by an impartial jury. Certainly the prospective jurors are then subject to challenges for cause and peremptory challenges on grounds of specific bias; but for the reasons stated above we cannot countenance the decimation of the surviving jurors by peremptory challenges on the ground of group bias alone."
Id. at 278,
The Florida Supreme Court recently held that "under article I, section 16 of the Florida Constitution[5] it is unnecessary that the defendant who objects to peremptory challenges directed to members of a cognizable racial group be of the same race as the jurors who are being challenged." Kibler v. State,
Moreover, it is well established that Ala. Const. §§ 1, 6, and 22 combine to guarantee equal protection of the laws. Ex Parte Branch,
Therefore, a defendant has standing to request a Batson hearing whenever (1) the State has exercised peremptory challenges to exclude members of a distinct racial group; and (2) the defendant requests such a hearing regardless of whether he is a member of that distinct group. Cf. Harrell v. State,
This opinion should not be read to require that the racial composition of the trial *689 jury actually correspond to that of the population from which it was drawn. The diversity of our society renders such an endeavor logistically prohibitive. See Commonwealth v. Soares,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgments are reversed and the two causes are remanded to the Court of Criminal Appeals with directions to remand them to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
ORIGINAL OPINION WITHDRAWN; OPINION SUBSTITUTED; REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS; APPLICATION FOR REHEARING OVERRULED.
MADDOX and INGRAM, JJ., concur.
HORNSBY, C.J., and SHORES, HOUSTON, STEAGALL and KENNEDY, JJ., concur as to the holding that the State violated the Batson v. Kentucky principle and concur in the result as to the holding on the standing issue.
HORNSBY, C.J., and MADDOX, SHORES, HOUSTON, STEAGALL, KENNEDY and INGRAM, JJ., concur in the overruling of the application for rehearing.
HORNSBY, Chief Justice (concurring in part and concurring in the result in part).
I concur with Justice Adams's opinion as to its holding that the State violated the principle of Batson v. Kentucky,
SHORES, HOUSTON, STEAGALL and KENNEDY, JJ., concur.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Warner does not contest the state's reasons for the challenge of this veniremember.
[2] Only Bird contests the state's reasons for the challenge of this veniremember.
[3] In Williams, the Court of Criminal Appeals did not address the defendant's claim of discrimination, because counsel for the defense had failed to raise a timely objection to the selection of the jury panel. Williams,
[4] The Sixth Amendment guarantees that "[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed."
[5] Fla. Const. art. I, § 16, provides for a "speedy and public trial by impartial jury in the county where the crime was committed."
