This is an appeal from an order of the District Court denying Gerald Duane Garrett’s 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Garrett argues, among other things, that the State’s exercise of its peremptory challenges to exclude all black jurors from the petit jury panel at his murder trial violated his Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Because the record in this case demonstrates that the prosecutor used his peremptory challenges in an im-permissibly discriminatory manner, we hold that Garrett’s constitutional rights were violated. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the District Court and grant Garrett's petition for habeas corpus relief.
I.
Garrett, who is black, was charged with capital murder in connection with the 1977 death of an elderly woman, Agnes Grote. He was tried in May 1980 in St. Louis County Circuit Court. Following a lengthy voir dire examination of prospective jurors, the prosecutor utilized three of his peremptory challenges to exclude the only three black venirepersons from the petit jury panel. When the defense moved for a mistrial on the ground that the prosecutor’s decision to strike those three jurors was based on improper racial considerations, the prosecutor volunteered the following explanation for his actions:
I think the record should reflect that the fact that the three jurors were black was not my reason for striking them, but, instead, it was the background, education and knowledge to understand fairly sophisticated scientific evidence which I intend to bring to the jury in this case.
Tr. II at 295. Thereupon, the trial judge denied the motion for a mistrial, stating, “I have no evidence before me to indicate the prosecutor chose to make his challenges except as he thought to be appropriate under all the facts developed by the voir dire.” Id.
Garrett was subsequently convicted of first-degree murder, and sentenced to life imprisonment. The Missouri Supreme Court affirmed his conviction and sentence on direct appeal.
State v. Garrett,
II.
Garrett’s claim that the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges violated his right to equal protection of the laws is governed by
Swain v. Alabama,
Swain
was overruled in part in
Batson v. Kentucky,
in which the Supreme Court held that a defendant “may establish a prima facie case of purposeful discrimination in selection of the petit jury solely on evidence concerning the prosecutor’s exercise of peremptory challenges at the defendant’s trial.”
The decision in Swain does not completely insulate a prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges in a given case. Although the Supreme Court declined to require an inquiry into a prosecutor’s decision to remove blacks from a particular jury, we believe that where, as here, the prosecutor volunteers the reasons for his actions and makes them part of the record, he opens the issue up for review. The record is then no longer limited solely to proof that the prosecutor has used his peremptory challenges to strike all black jurors from the defendant’s jury panel, and the presumption that the prosecutor has acted properly falls away. At that point, the court has a duty to satisfy itself that the prosecutor’s challenges were based on constitutionally permissible trial-related considerations, and that the proffered reasons are genuine ones, and not merely a pretext for discrimination.
The Ninth Circuit employed precisely this analysis in
Weathersby v. Morris,
[cjases where the prosecutor at trial volunteers his or her reasons for using peremptory challenges to exclude from the petit jury an identifiable group, present a situation distinguishable from Swain. In such cases, the court does not conduct the type of inquiry barred by Swain. The prosecutor’s motives have been voluntarily put on the record and the prosecutor can no longer be cloaked by the presumption of correctness. Our reading of Swain, convinces us that in such circumstances a court need not blind itself to the obvious and the court may review the prosecutor’s motives to determine whether “the purposes of the peremptory challenge are being perverted,” Swain,380 U.S. at 224 ,85 S.Ct. at 838 , by excluding an identifiable group “from juries for reasons wholly unrelated to the outcome of the particular case on trial.” Id.
Id. at 1496. 3 The Court then reviewed the record to determine whether the prosecutor’s volunteered reasons for exercising his peremptory challenges were, in fact, based on permissible trial related concerns, and concluded that the challenges were proper in the context of that particular case.
The Ninth Circuit stated in
Weathersby
that its approach to the issue had been suggested by our decision in
United States v. Greene, 626 F.2d
75 (8th Cir.),
cert. denied,
The Ninth Circuit has stressed the importance of the prosecutor’s voluntarily making the reasons for his peremptory challenges part of the record. See
United States v. Rabb,
On appeal, the defendants claimed that the District Court erred in failing to grant a mistrial, because the prosecutor had intentionally excluded blacks from the jury in violation of their Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. They argued that the Swain requirement of establishing the systematic exclusion of blacks did not apply because the prosecutor had stated the reasons for his actions on the record, and suggested that this Court should, in any event, reconsider the law of peremptory challenges in light of recent developments in the area. 5 The Court declined the invitation to re-examine the law, but carefully reviewed the prosecutor’s explanation for striking the black jurors in light of the record in the case. We found clear support in the record for the government’s claim that the prosecutor’s challenges were exercised for permissible trial-related concerns rather than race, and therefore concluded that the defendants’ constitutional rights had not been violated. 6
In the present case, even assuming that the prosecutor had no duty to justify his actions under
Swain,
by volunteering his reasons for striking the black jurors, he made those reasons part of the record subject to our review. He is no longer “cloaked by the presumption of correctness,” and we may review his motives “to determine whether ‘the purposes of the peremptory challenge are being perverted.’ ”
Weathersby,
As noted earlier, the prosecutor merely offered a blanket assertion that all three excluded black jurors lacked the “background, education and knowledge” to understand the scientific evidence he intended to present. The record reveals, however, that the prosecutor’s questions to the assembled venire focused mainly on prior jury service, acquaintance with prospective witnesses, past association or involvement with the criminal-justice system, knowledge or information about the case, and past area of residence. It was defense counsel who demonstrated concern with the education and background of the prospective jurors.
The prosecutor was, of course, entitled to rely on information elicited by defense counsel in making his jury selection. Even so, his proffered explanation does not withstand scrutiny. All three prospective black jurors had at least a high-school education, and one needed only three additional hours of credit to complete a college business degree. Among the *514 white jurors /remaining on the panel, two had not completed high school, and two others never specified the extent of their education (one explained only that he had been a factory worker for thirty-two years, and the other stated that he had been working as an electrician since he was seventeen years old). Only two of the jurors selected had been graduated from college; a third had an associate degree from a junior college; and the remaining jurors had a high-school education. It is thus difficult to credit the prosecutor’s statement that he struck the black jurors on the ground that they “lacked education.”
Indeed, the record of voir dire reveals no quality of education, experience, or background characteristic only of the black jurors other than race. Nor did the three black jurors appear to have much in common with one another except race: they were of different sexes, were engaged in different occupations, 7 and apparently lived in different areas in St. Louis County. None expressed any views indicating partiality to the defense. In fact, one stated that he found the nature of the crime (the brutal murder of an elderly woman) to be particularly distasteful, Tr. II at 155, suggesting if anything an attitude favorable to the prosecution. Furthermore, we can discern from the record no indication that the black jurors had any difficulty understanding or responding to questions which set them apart from white jurors who remained on the jury panel. And yet, in offering an explanation for rejecting the black jurors, the prosecutor lumped them together as a group rather than treating them as individuals. The trial court’s immediate acceptance of that explanation at face value compounds our concern about the adequacy and genuineness of the proffered explanation.
In short, the reasons volunteered by the prosecutor are simply not fairly supported by the record. Therefore, the state court’s implicit factual finding that the prosecutor had no impermissible motive is not entitled to any presumption of correctness. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(8). The prosecutor’s rationale — the blacks’ purported lack of education, background, and knowledge — seems clearly pretextual in light of his decision not to strike white jurors who differed in no significant way. Nor can we discern from the record any other legitimate trial-related reasons for striking all three black jurors. Despite the prosecutor’s disclaimer of racial motives, it appears that he was in effect excluding the blacks from the petit jury in this case in the belief that, as blacks, they were not qualified to serve as jurors in the trial of this black defendant. See
Batson,
Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the District Court, and remand this matter with directions to grant the petition for a writ of habeas corpus if the State does not begin new trial proceedings within such reasonable period as the District Court may fix.
Notes
. Garrett’s § 2254 petition contained eight grounds for relief. He reasserts six of those claims on appeal. Because of our disposition of the jury-selection issue, we need not reach his other contentions.
. As noted earlier, Garrett also argues that the prosecutor's actions violated his Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury drawn from a fair cross-section of the community. This Court has repeatedly held that there is no Sixth Amendment exception to the equal protection analysis of
Swain.
See,
e.g., United States v. Childress,
. We reject the State’s claim that Garrett may not rely on a "Weathersby theory" of relief because that theory was not litigated before the Missouri courts, and therefore does not satisfy the exhaustion requirements of § 2254, and because that theory was not presented to the District Court and thus may not be raised for the first time on appeal. Both the facts bearing on Garrett’s jury selection claim, and the substance of his constitutional arguments concerning that claim have been presented to the courts at every stage of this litigation. The fact that the Weath-ersby case may not have been previously cited is immaterial. Weathersby is not a new "theory” of relief; it is simply a new citation in support of a claim consistently urged throughout this case.
.
But see United States v. Danzey,
. Batson v. Kentucky was then pending before the United States Supreme Court.
. See also
United States v. Jackson,
. Two were male, one was female. One worked at Blue Shield as a clerk; another was a welder who had worked at General Motors for twenty-seven years; the third had been employed as an employee benefit representative at McDonnell-Douglas for twelve years.
