We consider the significance of a prosecutor’s stated inability to recall the reason for exercising a peremptory strike to remove an African-American potential-juror, pursuant to the second step of the Batson inquiry. We hold that in view of the relatively low number of peremptory challenges that the prosecutor exercised against African-American jurors, the prosecutor’s ability to justify her other peremptory challenges with specificity and to the state court trial judge’s satisfaction, as well as the fact that two African-American jurors remained on the jury and a third was a prospective juror, we cannot say that the California Court of Appeal’s denial of Gonzalez’s Batson claim was contrary to Supreme Court precedent or an objectively unreasonable application of such precedents. Therefore, the district court properly denied habeas corpus relief in this case governed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), and we affirm.
I
Gonzalez was charged with possession of cocaine base for sale under California Health
&
Safety Code Section 11351.5. He was tried to a jury in Los Angeles County Superior Court. Jury selection began on Thursday afternoon and ended
The sequence was as follows: the prosecution’s first peremptory strike excused an African-American juror. Gonzalez then exercised his first peremptory strike, at which point the prosecution accepted the panel. Gonzalez next exercised his second peremptory strike, and the prosecution exercised its second peremptory strike to excuse a Caucasian juror. Gonzalez exercised his third strike, and the prosecution again accepted the panel. The trial court recessed for the day.
The next morning, the jury box contained seven additional prospective jurors. The prosecution exercised its third peremptory strike to excuse an African-American juror. Gonzalez accepted the panel. The prosecution then exercised its fourth peremptory strike to excuse another African-American juror, and Gonzalez made his Wheeler motion. The state trial court agreed with Gonzalez that the strikes created a “classical” inference of racial bias, and asked that the prosecution explain its reasoning.
The prosecution justified excusing the second African-American juror on the grounds that “yesterdayfthe juror] had been very evasive when [the trial court] asked her specifically about the suspension, the license suspension.” In addition, the prosecution observed that the juror had been accepted as part of the panel several times on Thursday, but that the composition of the jury had changed overnight.
The prosecution justified excusing the third African-American juror on the grounds that “[the trial court] asked [the juror] several times [on Friday] about would [he] require the People to prove it beyond all doubt? And even though [the trial court] kept explaining it to [the juror], he kept answering he expects the People to prove it beyond all doubt, was his repetitive answer.”
The prosecution could not recall its reason for excusing the first African-American juror.
The trial judge stated that in light of the prosecution’s explanation for excusing two of the jurors on Friday and the fact that the prosecution accepted the panel twice on Thursday, the court was satisfied that no racial prejudice was involved. Defense counsel objected that the prosecutor had not provided an explanation for striking the first juror. The trial court again stated that it was satisfied with the prosecution’s overall explanation, noting that two African-American jurors were currently sitting on the panel, a third was a prospective panelist, and there were “at least three or four Hispanic jurors in the pan-elf,][s]o I think that we’re safe here.”
Gonzalez was convicted of possession of cocaine base, and he appealed. The California Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction, giving deference to the trial court’s determination that the prosecutor had a “bona fide” reason for exercising her peremptory challenges. The Court of Appeal concluded that Gonzalez had not met his ultimate burden of persuasion to prove
After failing to gain relief in the state courts, Gonzalez filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Central District of California. The district court denied the petition, and a Ninth Circuit panel granted Gonzalez a certificate of appealability on the Batson issue. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253. We affirm.
II
We review a district court’s denial of a petition for habeas corpus de novo.
Mendez v. Knowles,
Ill
So important is the need to avoid intentional racial discrimination in the selection of a jury, and so important is the need for procedures conducive to the forming of a jury that can be expected — so far as is feasible — to act without racial bias, that a prosecutor cannot use a single peremptory strike to excuse a juror on the basis of an impermissible motive such as race.
Batson v. Kentucky,
If the prosecutor does not meet his or her burden at step two, the trial court must still decide, at step three, whether the defendant has met his ultimate burden of persuasion.
See Yee v. Duncan,
Our Circuit law suggests that in evaluating a
Batson
challenge, we will consider both the prosecutor’s stated reasons and circumstantial evidence.
Yee,
We are not the first panel on the Ninth Circuit to review a
Batson
challenge in which the prosecutor, at the second step of the
Batson
framework, could not remember the reason he or she struck a juror. In
Yee v. Duncan,
we held that a prosecutor’s “failure to satisfy this burden to produce [and explain the reason for her strike] — for whatever reason — becomes evidence that is added to the inference of discrimination raised by the prima facie showing, but it does not end the inquiry.”
Yee,
In
Paulino v. Harrison,
We have found no precedent of the United States Supreme Court squarely addressing whether, when the prosecutor stands silent as to reason for one strike, but other circumstances — such as valid reasons for other strikes and the overall composition of the jury — suggest the absence of discrimination, the prosecutor’s inability to respond at step two requires a determination of violation of the rule of Batson. 4
Nor can we say that the state trial court made an unreasonable determination of fact in concluding that the prosecution’s strike was not an act of purposeful discrimination. Unlike the circumstances in
Paulino II,
the evidence that Gonzalez raised to support an inference of discrimination at
Batson’s
first step was not stark. The prosecutor used four peremptory strikes, three of them against African-American jurors, but three potential African-American jurors remained on the panel, two were seated in the jury box, and
First, the prosecutor accepted one of the African-American jurors twice before she exercised a peremptory strike to remove that juror. This suggests that her motives for exercising the strike were not racial but, as she stated, had to do with the jury composition. The first time the prosecutor accepted that juror on the panel, she had nine additional peremptory strikes that she could exercise, and the second time she had eight additional strikes. These facts illustrate that the prosecutor did not accept that juror twice simply because her peremptory strikes were running low.
Cf. Miller-El,
Another factor weighing against a determination that Gonzalez has met his burden to prove discrimination is that at the time of Gonzalez’s
Wheeler
motion, three African-American jurors remained on the venire and two in the jury box. The fact that African-American jurors remained on the panel “may be considered indicative of a nondiscriminatory motive.”
Turner v. Marshall,
Further, the state trial court credited the prosecutor’s nondiscriminatory reasons for the exercise of her other two strikes, and we properly should give a measure of deference to this factual determination. Gonzalez does not argue on appeal that those reasons were pretextual. We are confronted with a single challenge to a single juror, not a challenge to the elimination of all or most of the jurors of a particular race.
Compare Yee,
In the final analysis the key question for the state trial court was whether there was purposeful discrimination. The prosecutor’s failure to give a valid and race-neutral reason for her peremptory strike of the first juror weighs against her in an assessment of her motive, but that is not all that was before the state trial court and it had other good reasons to conclude there was not purposeful discrimination. Whatever might be required in interpreting
Batson
on a direct federal appeal,
IV
For the reasons stated above, the district court’s denial of Gonzalez’s federal habeas corpus petition is AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
People v. Wheeler,
. In addition, the Court of Appeal hypothesized about the reason the prosecution may have struck the first juror. The juror had responded to a question about religious views with the following statement: "I am a strong believer in forgiving and — I am a strong believer that what applies to one person should apply to another. And if I make a moral judgment toward one person, I should be in a position to be judged the same way regardless of my position in the case.” This exchange, the Court of Appeal opined, “was a reasonable and neutral basis for excusing her from the case.” As we explain in footnote six, infra, we need not review whether this determination was a reasonable application of Bat-son.
. We recognize that
Miller-El
is not the only
Batson
challenge the Supreme Court has addressed in recent memory.
See Johnson v. California,
. The closest thing to guidance in the
Batson
decision itself states: "Nor may the prosecutor rebut the defendant’s case merely by denying that he had a discriminatory motive or affirming his good faith in making individual selections. If these general assertions were accepted as rebutting a defendant’s prima facie case, the Equal Protection Clause would be but a vain and illusory requirement.”
Batson,
Similarly, the Court in
Miller-El,
which was decided after the state appellate decision, but which might be considered to shed light on the meaning of the applicable
Batson,
emphasized: "[I]t can sometimes be hard to say what the reason [for exercising a peremptory
And in
Johnson,
the Supreme Court opined: "In the unlikely hypothetical in which the prosecutor declines to respond to a trial judge’s inquiry regarding his justification for making a strike, the evidence before the judge would consist not only of the original facts from which the prima facie case was established, but also the prosecutor’s refusal to justify his strike in light of the court's request. Such a refusal would provide additional support for the inference of discrimination raised by a defendant's prima facie case.”
. The prosecution’s total inability to explain a peremptory strike is troubling, because note taking during jury selection would have provided an easy remedy and avoided assessment of the issue placed before us. It is obviously a desirable and correct practice for a prosecutor to have notes of reasons for a peremptory strike if a challenge is raised requiring a race-neutral explanation at step two of Batson. But absent such notes or ability of a prosecutor to recall why a strike was made, the implications of prosecutorial silence on the reasons for a particular peremptory strike must be addressed. We need not decide whether we might interpret Batson differently if this were a direct appeal from a federal court trial, for in the context of a state prisoner’s federal court challenge to confinement by seeking a writ of habeas corpus, we are bound by the superordinate strictures of the AEDPA.
. In light of the circumstantial evidence supporting the trial court’s decision, we need not decide whether the California Court of Appeal could offer a hypothetical justification for the prosecution's first peremptory strike consistent with the requirements of
Batson.
However, the language of the Supreme Court in
Miller-El
is suggestively to the contrary.
See Miller-El,
