Petitioner Flanders Jordan, a black defendant, appeals from a judgment entered October 15, 1998 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Mukasey, J.) that denied his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Petitioner makes several claims on this appeal, but the principal one is that the prosecutor at his state court trial denied him the right to equal protection of the law through the use of peremptory challenges of potential black jurors under the teaching of
Batson v. Kentucky,
Without the accused’s critical right to an impartially selected jury of his peers, the guarantee of trial by jury has little meaning. We are cognizant that in jury selection it behooves the trial judge to make his rulings promptly and on the spot, so to speak. The judge may not however so restrict defense counsel’s arguments that the accused suffers the loss of an impartial jury at trial. The accused should not lose such a fundamental right because a trial judge is impatient.
BACKGROUND
Petitioner and a co-defendant were accused of stabbing an acquaintance to death on a Manhattan subway train on November 19, 1989. Petitioner was charged with murder in the second degree and criminal possession of a weapon. He was convicted in 1991 after a jury trial in New York State Supreme Court, New York County, of manslaughter in the first degree (a lesser included offense) and sentenced to a prison term of 11 to 22 years. Petitioner took an unsuccessful direct appeal to the Appellate Division.
People v. Jordan,
Among those other claims, petitioner maintains that the arresting officer lacked probable cause to arrest him, that he was denied a fair trial because the trial judge improperly made comments during the voir dire regarding a defendant’s right not to testify in his own behalf, and that the trial judge abused his discretion and coerced a verdict because he discharged one juror from jury service, but during the trial refused to discharge two others who said they had travel plans. The district court rejected these claims as procedurally barred because petitioner failed to raise them in his application for leave to appeal to the New York Court of Appeals.
I Petitioner’s Other Claims
We discuss these other claims first, and then the
Batson
claim. Jordan’s petition with respect to the other claims just recited is controlled by
Grey v. Hoke,
In this case, Jordan forcefully argued his
Batson
claim in the first three paragraphs of his application for leave, but made no reference to his other claims. In the fourth paragraph of his counsel’s letter to the New York Court of Appeals he asked that he be given permission to appeal “[f]or all of these reasons and the reasons set forth in his Appellate Division briefs.” Arguing a single claim at length and making only passing reference to possible other claims to be found in the attached briefs does not fairly apprise the state court of those remaining claims.
See Grey,
II Batson Claim
A. Proceedings in State Trial Court
We turn now to petitioner’s principal claim that he was denied equal protection of the law by the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges striking several potential black jurors.
See Batson,
Counsel began his Batson application by stating “[m]y record indicates that the prosecutor has used ten challenges; of those ten challenges, five have been used to discharge black jurors out of a possible pool of people that have sat in the jury box of seven. I would submit to the Court— The trial judge cut him off, asking “[w]ho were the five black persons who were excused?” A short colloquy identified two black panelists excused for cause and three struck on peremptory challenges.
Before Jordan’s defense counsel could make any argument to support a prima facie showing of discrimination, the trial judge stated, “in order to save us an awful lot of time, while I don’t think it’s necessary or required at the present time, I would ask [the prosecutor] to give me, if you have it, a non-racial basis for exercising the challenges.” The prosecutor provided race neutral reasons for the three strikes. The trial judge then ruled “to the extent there is any application on the Bat-son, I’m denying it. It seems to me there is some rational basis for the exercise of the challenge.”
Later in the voir dire defense counsel for Jordan’s co-defendant attempted to make a statement regarding the Batson challenge. The trial judge told him “[y]ou’ve already "made your record.” When counsel objected that “the record is not complete” the judge replied “do it very succinctly, because I’m not going to be spending more time in here listening to you.” The judge himself challenged a fifth strike “for the record, for the various objections made by the defense,” but found “there is a basis for the challenge” after the prosecutor offered a race neutral reason.
In his habeas corpus petition, Jordan avers the
Batson
proceedings were handled improperly. The district court found “no indication in the record that defense counsel was denied an opportunity to rebut the prosecutor’s reasons for exercising his peremptory challenges.”
Jordan,
*200 B. Law Under Batson
In assessing a challenge under
Bat-son,
a trial court must (1) decide whether the defendant has made a
prima facie
showing that the prosecutor has exercised a peremptory strike on the basis of race; (2) if so, decide whether the prosecutor has satisfied the burden of coming forward with a race neutral explanation for striking the potential juror; and, if so, then must (3) make a determination whether the defendant has carried his burden of proving purposeful discrimination.
See Batson,
Examining these steps in some detail, we note that at the first step the defendant must show that the circumstances raise an inference of racial discrimination. Such an inference may stem, for example, from a pattern of strikes against minority jurors.
See id.
at 97,
There is no dispute regarding the trial court’s conclusion that the reasons given for the prosecutor’s peremptory challenges were race neutral. As such, they satisfy the prosecution’s burden at the second
Batson
step. As the magistrate’s report to the district court detailed, the reasons offered for the strikes in this case — negative experience with law enforcement, age, life experience, type of employment, and demeanor — have been found to be acceptable race neutral bases for peremptory challenges.
See Jordan,
Jordan now declares that the district court’s conclusory statement that the prosecutor’s explanations were race neutral did not satisfy
Batson’s
third step. We agree. The Supreme Court made clear in
Batson
that at the third step in the analysis the trial court has a “duty to determine if the defendant has established purposeful discrimination.”
Batson,
Hence, the third step of the
Bat-son
inquiry requires a trial judge to make “an ultimate determination on the issue of discriminatory intent based on all the facts and circumstances.”
United States v. Alvarado,
We also have disapproved a trial court conducting its review of a
Batson
application with undue haste and ruling in a summary fashion.
See United States v. Stavroulakis,
The state trial judge presiding at Jordan’s trial was not in a position to make the requisite determination as to discriminatory intent. In an effort to save “an awful lot of time” he ruled summarily on the
Batson
application after an extremely brief colloquy, and resisted counsel’s efforts to make arguments regarding the peremptory strikes so as to create a full record. The trial judge could not properly decide the third
Batson
step because he granted counsel no time to identify the relevant facts and assess the circumstances necessary to decide whether the race neutral reasons given were credible and nonpretextual. This cursory treatment of Jordan’s
Batson
application was not a meaningful inquiry into “the decisive question ... whether counsel’s race-neutral explanation for a peremptory challenge should be believed.” Hernandez,
When there are many factors available upon which a trial court may rely, it may properly make a determination that the prosecutor did not discriminate on the basis of race, even absent a
prima facie
showing of discrimination.
See id.
at 369-70,
The rule in
Batson
is meant to prevent prosecutors from striking jurors in criminal cases because they happen to be of the same race as the defendant. The letter of
Batson
requires the trial court to consider all relevant circumstances surrounding a defendant’s
prima facie
showing of discrimination.
See Batson,
The trial judge in this case made no effort to comply with the letter, much less the spirit, of
Batson.
Rather, he engaged in a perfunctory exercise designed to speed the proceedings along. Without hearing any argument from defense counsel, the judge declared it was not then necessary that the prosecutor provide a race neutral basis for his challenges, but asked him to provide one in order to save time. This does not constitute a meaningful inquiry into the question of discrimination.
Batson
requires a trial judge to ensure that a defendant on trial is afforded the equal protection of the law. This is
*202
precisely what the trial court failed to do. Because the court did not make the required determination at the third
Batson
step, we must reverse the portion of the judgment that denied petitioner’s habeas application based on a violation of
Batson.
We therefore direct the district court to, in its discretion, hold a hearing to reconstruct the prosecutor’s state of mind at the time of jury selection, or if the passage of nine years since Jordan’s trial and other circumstances should have made such a determination impossible or unsatisfactory, to order that the state grant Jordan a new trial.
See Tankleff v. Senkowski,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, we affirm the judgment denying the writ, in part, and reverse it in part and remand with instructions to grant the writ for the violation of Batson.
