OPINION
Aрpellant Jason Finley appeals from his conviction for murder. In two issues, he argues that he is entitled to acquittal because there is legally insufficient evidence that he committed the murder, or alternatively, that he is entitled to a new trial based on a racially motivated strike of a prospective juror during jury selection.
We affirm.
Background
On a Tuesday afternoon in April 2013, two teenage girls came home from school and found their mother, Darlishia Watson, lying dead on the living room floor. She had been stabbed 82 times.
When police arrived and searched the home, they discovered that Watson’s cell phone and keys were missing, as was the trash bag from the kitchen trash can. Police believed Watson was murdered sometime between 2:42 p.m., when she last sent a text message from her cell phone, and roughly 3:00 p.m., when her two eldest daughters arrived home from school. One
Appellant and Watson had been in a dating relationship for roughly eight months. Witnesses placed appellant at or near Watson’s house on the afternoon Watson was murdered. He left around 3:00 p.m. and is seen on a neighbor’s surveillance camera walking away from Watson’s house holding a white or clear trash bag. The neighbor, Craig, who was home that day, thought it was “suspicious” that someone was carrying a bag of trash down the street on trash day and the trash had not yet been collected: “why not just put the trash on the curb.” Craig “g[o]t a good look” at the man walking down thе street and identified him as appellant; Craig also identified appellant from a photo array.
A twelve-year-old boy who lived in the neighborhood, Jonathan, was outside his house playing basketball around 3:00 p.m. that afternoon. Jonathan said he saw a man carrying a plastic bag walk “fairly quickly” down the street. Jonathan thought “it was kind of weird, you know. One, it was trash day and two, I’m not really sure why you would take a trash bag to a Texaco.”
While riding the school bus home, Watson’s oldest daughter saw appellant walking down the street carrying a trash bag.
Deputy Clayton, the investigator who processed the crime scene, noted the presence of bloodstains in the living room, where Watson was murdered, and in the kitchen. Blood stained the area around the kitchen sink, indicating that someone had tried to wash their hands or clean up after the murder. Bloodstains were present on the side of the kitchen trash can, which did not have a trash bag in it. Deputy Clayton sprayed the floor with a chemical designed to enhance any hard-to-see bloodstains. The sprayed floor revealed partial footprints going in both directions between the living room and the kitchen. There were bloody footprints on the floor around the sink and around the trash can, as well as a partial footprint on the trash can’s foot pedal, which could be depressed to lever the lid open.
Deputy Clayton believed that, based on the blood spаtter, the suspect was likely wounded and bleeding. As he explained, when a knife is used to stab a victim repeatedly blood is likely to spread from the blade up the handle, making the handle slippery. If the knife lacks a guard to stop the assailant’s hqnd from sliding, the assailant’s hand often will be cut when it slides down the blade.
Police suspected appellant may have been responsible for Watson’s death. Appellant was living in a hotel at the time. Police officers went to the hotel the night of Watson’s murder to talk with him, and appellant consented to a search of his room. The officers seized three knives from appellant’s room, though police were ultimately unable to connect any of the knives to Watson’s death. Appellant also agreed to go to the police station to give an interview. During the officers’ interactions with appellant, they observed that appellant had a “pretty substantial cut or gash” on the palm side of his right-hand pinkie finger, consistent with Deputy Clayton’s expectations regarding potential injury to the assailant’s hand.
Police also asked for appellant’s consent to obtain a DNA sample, which appellant provided. Forensic testing revealed that DNA obtained from two blood swabs on the floor could not exclude appellant as a possible source of the DNA (and thus the blood).
Appellant was charged with Watson’s murder. He pleaded not guilty and the case proceeded to a jury trial. The jury found appellant guilty as charged in the' indictment, and the trial court sentenced appellant to life in prison. This appeal timely followed.
Analysis'
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence
In his second issue, appellant argues that there is insufficient evidence that he committed the murder for which he was convicted. We address this issue first because it seeks .the greatest relief. See Campbell v. State,
1. Standard of review and governing law
We apply -a legal-sufficiency standard of review in determining whether the evidence is sufficient to support each element of a criminal offense that the State is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia,
Appellant was charged with, and convicted of, murder. A person commits murder if, as; relevant here, he: (1) intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual; or (2) intends to cause serious bodily injury and commits an act clear
2. Application
Appellant argues -that “no reasonable jury properly could have found that appellаnt committed the murder of the complainant. The State did not present any evidence from a witness who actually saw who killed Ms. Watson, or any evidence that proved that that appellant was the individual who entered and exited Ms. Watson’s home around the time of the killing, or any evidence that appellant admitted to stabbing Ms. Watson.” This argument is erroneously premised on the idea that the State can meet its burden by presenting only direct evidence of a crime. Yet, circumstantial evidence “is as probative as direct evidence in establishing the guilt of an actor, and circumstantial evidence alone can be sufficient to establish guilt.” Hooper v. State,
Perhaps recognizing this point, appellant further contends that the DNA evidence “does not prove that appellant was the actual person who stabbed Ms. Watson, only that he had been in [Watson’s] home at some point previously.” In order to address appellant’s argument, we turn to whether the DNA evidence,- along with the other evidence adduced at trial, supports the jury’s finding of guilt. See Caldwell,
For purposes of appellant’s issue, the ultimate fact to be proved was the identity of Watson’s killer. See Clayton v. State,
'Separately from establishing appellant’s presence at the crime scene, the blood provides an additional, incremental piece of circumstantial evidence that supports an inference that appellant was the person who stabbed Watson to death. See id. Deputy Clayton testified that a bloody knife will sometimes slip in an assailant’s hand, cutting him or her. Appellant had a fresh cut on his right-hand pinkie finger on the day of, arid following, the murder. In considering this evidence, a rational jurоr could infer that appellant’s cut was the source of blood found at the scene, and
Moreover, blood containing a mixture of appellant’s DNA and Watson’s DNA was found within and nearby the sink. While the presence of appellant’s blood, alone, is evidence only that he was at the house at some point, the mixture of appellant’s blood and Watson’s blood in the sink is evidence that appellant was at the sсene after Watson had been stabbed and that he was close enough to her that her blood transferred to his person. See Branham v. State, No. 14-15-00329-CR,
The State also presented evidence—both through testifying witnesses and surveillance video—that appellant quickly left Watson’s house carrying a trash bag. Blood was found on the kitchen trash can, and the trash can was missing its liner when police arrived at Watson’s house. Jurors could rationally infer that, in order to dispose of evidence, appellant bagged evidence of the crime, such as bloody clothes or the murder weapon, and left the scene carrying the bag. Accord Clayton,
A factfinder may draw an inference of guilt from the circumstance of flight. See id. at 780. There is no question that appellant left Watson’s house some time around 3:00 p.m. on the afternoon of April 2.
After reviewing the evidence under the Jackson standard, we hold that the combined and cumulative force of the evidence is legally sufficient to support the jury’s guilty verdict. Clayton,
We overrule appellant’s second issue.
B. Batson Challenge
In his remaining issue, appellant argues that the trial court erred by denying his Batson challenge after the State used a peremptory strike to dismiss from the jury panel a prospective juror whom appellant asserts is a member of the same racial minority as appellant, African-American. Appellant argues that the State’s strike was on account of the potential juror’s membership in a cognizable racial minority.
1. Standard of review and governing law
In Batson v. Kentucky, the Supreme Court held that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution forbids the State from exercising its peremptory strikes based solely on the race of a potential juror. Batson v. Kentucky,
A Batson challenge consists of three steps. Nieto,
We review a trial court’s ruling on a Batson challenge for clear error, focusing on the genuineness of the asserted non-racial motive for the strike, rather than the reasonableness. Nieto,
2. Application
a.Appellant’s prima facie showing is moot
At,the conclusion of voir dire, defense counsel raised a Batson challenge to the State’s peremptory strikes of two veni: re members. On appeal, appellant challenges only the strike of venire member four. • ,
It is unclear whether apрellant established a prima facie case of racial discrimination. The record.: does not indicate,whether venire member four was a member of a cognizable minority, or whether the State used peremptory strikes only on minority venire members. Nonetheless, we need- not- 'determine whether appellant made a prima facie case of racial discrimination -because the State offered a race-neutrál explanation for its strike of venire member four, thereby mooting the issue of appellant’s prima facie case. See Simpson v. State,
b..The State provided a facially race-neutral explanation
When .asked to present any “race neutral reasons for striking nuraber[ ] four,” the prosecutor responded1 that he believed venire member four stated that she would hold the State to “a 100% burden,” rather than the required, and lesser, burden of beyond a reasonable doubt. This is a race-neutral explanation. See Harris v. State, No. AP-76810,
c..The record does not show that the prosecutor’s explanation was pretext for purposeful discrimination
The burden then shifted back to appellant to prove the State’s proffered explanation was pretext for purposeful discrimination. Blackman,
After the State offered its explanation, appellant challenged the accuracy of the prosecutor’s statements regarding some of the responses given by venire member four, saying he had “no notes on any of three of us saying 100% of anything.” Appellant did not present any evidence to disprove or impeach the prosecutor’s statements or seek to cross-examine the prosecutor regarding his explanations. See, e.g., Whitsey v. State,
On appeal, appellant argues that the State’s race-neutral explanation was pre-textual because it is contradicted by the record. Specifically, appellant contends that venire member four “never, ever indicated in her answers during voir dire that she would hold the State to a burden of proof of 100%,” As. discussed, further below, appellant does not present an analysis comparing the State’s strikes between minority and non-minority venire members, and the appellate record does not contain any evidence establishing each venire members’ race.
We turn to the. voir .dire record to assess whether .the trial court’s ruling was clearly erroneous. See Nieto,
[Prosecutor]: Judge talked to y’all. This is a murder case. There’s one thing I talk about every time, no matter what I’m trying. It’s—I ¡talk about, the burden of proof. It’s beyond a reasonable doubt. What is it? What is beyond a reasonable doubt? Well, there’s no definition for it, but I can tell you what it’s not. It’s the— first of all, it’s the same burden as a speeding ticket. Okay. It’s not beyond all doubt or a shadow of a doubt. You don’t throw away your common sense' at the courthouse door, right? You use your common sense. You use it every day. You come to a determination about beyond a reasonable doubt, using your common sense.'
The question I always have is, if I prove my case to you beyond a reasonable doubt and you believe it, can you convict in this murder case, or would you still require more than beyond a reasonable doubt? And if you feel that way, it’s fine. It just means this isn’t the right case for you. That’s what it means. And I use this, and I go through this one by one because this is so imрortant.
Several years ago I tried a case where a gentleman was shot in the head by another individual. We, were trying that case, and I talked to the jury after-wards. They voted not guilty. I said, I respect your verdict, not a problem, but I talked to the foreman. And I looked at the foreman and I said but what could I have done better in order to get y’all to Vote guilty? What was I missing? What did you need? And he told me, well, you didn’t prove your case 100%.
Well, Juror No. 4, what burden was he holding me to?
[Venire Person]: Beyond all doubt, I guess.
[Prosecutor]: You guess? Was he holding me to beyond all doubt?
[Venire Person]: No. He was holding you to 100%.
* * *
[Prosecutor]: My question is, are you going to hold me to beyond a reasonable doubt, or are you going to hold me to beyond all doubt? If it’s beyond all doubt, that’s fine. It just means this isn’t the right case for you. It’s a murder case. It’s serious. I’m going to go one by one.
Juror No. 1, are you going to hold me to beyond a reasonable doubt or all doubt?
[Venire Person]: Beyond a reasonable doubt.
[Prosecutor]: Reasonable. Juror No. 3.
[Venire Person]: Reasonable.
[Prosecutor]: Juror No. 4.
[Venire Person]: Reasonable.
[Prosecutor]: You kind of shrugged your shoulders. If you feel that way, you got to tell me now and not when you’re sitting in one of the comfortable seats because if it’s 11 to 1,1 know yPall laugh, but those are more comfortable than those. If you’re hesitating, it’s fíne. It just means it’s not the case for you.
[Venire Person]: I have—
(Reporter interrupts)
[Prosecutor]: You’re going to have to speak up. She’s taking down everything that we say. Okay? So, beyond a reasonable doubt?
[Venire Person]: Beyond a reasonable doubt.
⅜ H* ⅝
(Conference at the bench, on the record)
[Defense Counsel]: Juror No. 28, Your Honor, appears to be a State’s strike, and I’m going to make a Batson challenge on Juror No. 28 and Juror No. 4.
[Trial Court]: For the record, the defense is making a challenge as to Batson for State’s No. 4 аnd 28. All right. I would assume the State is ready to present their race neutral reasons for striking numbers four and 28 at this time.
[Prosecutor]: Juror No. 4’s response to [co-counsel’s] question about beyond a reasonable doubt, she said 100% in response to [co-counsel’s] question. We didn’t feel comfortable with being held to a 100% burden. He asked her several times, and she kept responding 100%.
* * *
[Defense Counsel]: ... My notes on Juror No. 4, I have no notes on any of three of us saying 100% of anything, Your Honor. So, I would—so, I would refute the State’s proffer with respect to those two.
[Prosecutor]: We can go back and look at the record.
[Trial Court]: I remember it. I remember it. Your motion is denied.
After reviewing the voir dire record, we agree with appellant that the prosecutor’s ground for striking venire member four was contradicted by the record. The prosecutor said that venire member four “said 100%” in response to a question about the burden of proof. However, the record reflects that venire member four was describing her interpretation of a venire member’s response to a question about the burden of proof raised by the prosecutor in a prior case. Venire member four did not say that she would hold the State to a “100% burden” of proof, although other venire members did assert that they would hold the State to a “beyond all doubt” standard. The issue for this court to decide
According to appellant, a factual inaccuracy underlying the State’s explanation is alone enough to meet his burden of persuasion that the explanation was pretext for purposeful discrimination. The Court of Criminal Appeals, however, has held the contrary. In Ford v. State, for example, the court rejected the premise that a factually incorrect, but racially neutral, explanation for a peremptory strike could by itself satisfy the defendant’s burden on a Batson challenge. See Ford v. State,
Similarly, in Watkins, the prosecutor attributed a statement to a prospective juror that was unsupported by the record. Watkins,
Also, in Blackman, a prosecutor offered a demeanor-based explanation for why he struck a prospective juror, but he based his challenge on mistaken recollections of the juror’s answers. See Blackman,
Based on this binding precedent, we conclude that merely identifying a factual mistake in the State’s race-neutral explanation for its peremptory strike is not sufficient to meet the appellant’s burden of proving purposeful discrimination. Although the record supports appellant’s ar
Appellant does not direct us to other evidence in the record, beyond the factual inaccuracy of the prosecutor’s explanation, tending to show a racially motivated animus. While courts have held that a number of factors, if present, tend to show purposeful discrimination, appellant does not identify any such factors here other than his argument about the prosecutor’s factual error. See Miller-El v. Dretke,
The intermediate appellate court cases on which appellant relies are distinguishable or pre-date relevant Court of Criminal Appeals authority. In Reich-Bacot v. State, the prosecutor struck a potential juror because she “had in the past worked with people who wеre involved in criminal activity ... at a halfway house type situation.” Reich-Bacot v. State,
For this same reason, our opinion in Jones v. State is distinguishable. See Jones v. State,
At bottom, appellant offers no evidence that would support his burden of proving that the State acted with purposeful discrimination in striking venire member four. Appellant does not challenge the genuineness, of the prosecutor’s race-neutral explаnation, other than to prove that it was not in fact supported by the record. Under Ford, showing a prosecutor’s reason to be factually incorrect “is not equal to proving that the reason given was a pretext for a racially motivated strike.” Ford,
Viewing the record in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, we conclude that the trial court’s denial of appellant’s Batson challenge was not clearly erroneous. See Nieto,
We overrule appellant’s first issue.
Having overruled appellant’s two issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Notes
. The analyst explained that she can only say whether a person is excluded as a contributor
, Appellant is African-American. The DNA profile obtained from the floor swabs is expected to occur even less frequently in Caucasian or Hispanic populations—approximately 1 in 44.06 sextilliоn and 1 in 203.3 sextillion, respectively.
. DNA results obtained from a water bottle found neat* Watson’s body were consistent with a mixture of DNA frorp two or more individuals; Watson and appellant could not be excluded as possible contributors to the mixture. On cross-examination, the forensic analyst admitted that she could not tell whether appellant’s DNA on the bottle came from his blood or some other source, like skin cells or saliva.
. Indeed, defense counsel stated in her opening argument to the jury that “there is no debate that that is, in fact, Jason Finley walking out of Darlishia Watson's house.”
. Parties often attempt to prove pretext by offering a comparative analysis of venire members of a particular race who were struck with members of other races who were not struck. See, e.g., Miller-El v. Dretke,
. The same appellate court relied on Reich-Bacot in a later case, in which the court also reversed the trial court's Batson ruling because a prosecutor’s explanation was contradicted by the record. Greer v. State,
. The court in Lewis also held that a peremptory strike was not supported by the record where the prosecutor struck a prospective juror because he "might be biased," but the prosecutor did not question the juror about a potential bias. See Lewis,
