This appeal from denial of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus concerns the systematic use of peremptory challenges, in a single criminal prosecution, to excuse members of a jury venire from service on a state petit jury solely on the basis of their race. The decisive legal issues are whether the selection of the jury by the prosecutor and defense counsel violated either the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection or the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee that criminal charges will be tried before an impartial jury. We conclude that
Swain v. Alabama,
I.
Larry Booker appeals from the district court’s denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus, which he filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. Booker and his co-defendant are two black adult men who were accused of the armed robbery of a shoe store located in Lincoln Park, Michigan, outside Detroit. The robbers initially held two white, female clerks at gunpoint and then left them bound in the back of the store. At trial, in the Circuit Court of Wayne County, one clerk testified that Booker’s co-defendant ripped off her clothes below the waist, touched her genitals, and offered a sexual act. The defendants presented alibis and claimed that they were mistakenly identified as the robbers. On May 1,1975, a jury composed exclusively of white citizens convicted both defendants of armed robbery. At the same trial, Booker’s co-defendant was charged with intent to commit rape and convicted of assault and battery. Booker was sentenced to a prison term of fifteen to twenty-five years.
After properly exhausting his appeals in the Michigan courts without receiving re
*764
dress,
see Rose v. Lundy,
It is an inescapable conclusion from a study of the arguments made by the parties that each side was excusing jurors primarily on the basis of their race. The spectacle of attorneys on both sides of a case dismissing jurors simply on the basis of their color is a deplorable one which tarnishes the image of our system of justice. Ultimately, it appears that such trial strategy is nevertheless permissible under some circumstances. Since I so read the Supreme Court’s decision in Swain v. Alabama,380 U.S. 202 ,85 S.Ct. 824 ,13 L.Ed.2d 759 (1965), I respectfully recommend that habeas relief on this ground be denied for the reasons discussed below.
The magistrate accurately described the jury selection in this case. The white jury was the result of an open battle of peremptory challenges in which the prosecutor claimed he was responding to racist exclusions by the defense counsel, who in turn denied using peremptory challenges solely on the basis of race. The state trial court judge noted that the jury venire began with “substantially more white jurors than there were black.” Tr. at 379. The record reveals that the prosecutor exercised twenty-six of his allotted thirty peremptory challenges. The prosecutor used his peremptory challenges to excuse twenty-two black potential jurors, in several instances without addressing any questions to the excused juror. The two defendants used all forty of their combined peremptory challenges and excused thirty-seven white prospective jurors.
When the resulting jury had been selected, the defendants moved for a mistrial in order to select another panel. During the discussion of this motion, defense counsel charged the prosecutor with excluding black jurors solely on the basis of race.
[T]he only time the Prosecutor indicated his satisfaction with the jury except for very early in the proceeding was when there were no black people on the jury.
I would suggest to the Court that this methodical exclusion of black people from the jury, even though albeit peremptory challenges, is prosecutorial misconduct at its most blatant.
Tr. at 374. The prosecutor did not deny this charge:
Early in the game, they could have passed the jury and had five or six black people, if they will remember, and quit being distorted about this.
They will remember, I said, I was satisfied with the jury as it now sits when we had five or six black people in that panel. I challenge them to say otherwise.
Tr. at 385.
Defense counsel expressly argued that the reasons the prosecutor methodically excused black prospective jurors, in a case involving two black male defendants and two white female victims, was exclusively because of those prospective jurors’ race:
And then, the blacks that were down here were systematically excluded from the jury.
Now, we don’t have to speculate. Mr. Easton [the prosecutor] has twice now called to the Court’s attention that there were certain murmurs in the court. Perhaps, certain hissing kind of sound through lips from certain of the jurors. And we don’t have to speculate on why. Because everyone in this courtroom was shocked by the systematic and unabashed way he went about excluding every black that sat on that jury.
If there was any doubt, I heard Mr. Easton say to Mr. Ackerman, we can get *765 a conviction in this case if we don’t get a black jury.
Now, I’ll ask him to deny that. If he wants to deny it. I heard him say it.
And that furnishes, clears up any doubt in this matter as to what the specific intention here was.
The specific intention is to get a white jury to try two black men where there are two girls, two white girls who are the complaining witnesses.
Tr. at 375-76.
In his response, the prosecutor did not deny the statement attributed to him by defense counsel. He did not deny systematically excusing black prospective jurors solely on the basis of race. Instead, the prosecutor attempted to justify his practice.
I’m a friend of blacks, yellows, everything, but I have a duty, too.
And I have had four consecutive hung juries three years ago.
I’m a trial lawyer.
This is my hundred fifty-sixth jury trial in this building in the last four and a half years.
I have had hung juries because of the systematic eliminating of middle-aged white people.
I didn’t start it. They started it.
They polarized the jury to the point the ones that did come up here, I sit here and look at nine black people and I look at five white people.
How can, since they’ve done that, since they took off all the middle-aged white men and ladies in some cases, could I get a fair trial?
I think the victims have a right in this country too.
I’m not asking the jury to be partial. I don’t think these ladies and gentlemen will be partial because of race. I’m not partial.
And I gladly would explain to Mr. White, the last black I took off, I would like to explain to him why I took him off. I would say, Mr. White, I didn’t want to put you in an embarrassing position.
I don’t think Counsel realizes, I’m looking at the standpoint from this gentleman and the other gentlemen, finding himself in a room with maybe ten white people and maybe in their own conscience they might believe, I don’t believe these two black men did it, and they may say to him you’re saying that because you’re black.
I could see it coming. I told Officer Ackerman, at the rate they’re going, it’s not too long that I’m going to have more challenges than they.
Tr. at 382, 384-85. Defense counsel closed by denying that they had ever attempted to empanel an all black jury.
After this remarkable exchange, the trial court noted that both the prosecutor and defense counsel had used their peremptory challenges for the purpose of excusing potential jurors because of their race. Tr. at 389. The trial court then denied the motion for a mistrial. The trial judge determined that no precedent authorized him to control the use of peremptory challenges by either the prosecutor or defense counsel.
II.
Swain v. Alabama,
The Court arrived at this conclusion despite its finding that the peremptory challenge is a creature of statute rather than a constitutional requirement.
Id.
at 219,
According to the Court’s analysis in
Swain,
the proper function of the peremptory challenge is to promote the two preeminent characteristics of an impartial jury. By enabling the parties to eliminate the “extremes of partiality on both sides,”
id.
at 219,
Because the purpose of the peremptory challenge is to enable parties to dismiss potential jurors for the most slender and evanescent of reasons, the Court found that its “essential nature” is its exercise “without a reason stated, without inquiry and without being subject to the court’s control.”
Id.
at 220,
Justice Marshall has observed that
“Swain
has been the subject of almost universal and often scathing criticism.”
McCray v. New York,
Were it within our power to right the manifest error that we believe
Swain
represents, we would hold that the prosecutor’s conduct in the present case violated the Equal Protection Clause. We recognize both that our authority as an intermediate court is limited and that we cannot anticipate the outcome of
Batson.
Therefore, although we agree with the Second Circuit’s cogent criticism of
Swain
in
McCray v. Abrams,
we also accept that
Swain
is “clear, direct, and unequivocal” in prohibiting an “equal protection challenge to the prosecution’s racially discriminatory use of its peremptory challenges solely on the basis of the prosecution’s acts in a single case.”
McCray v. Abrams,
III.
This holding, however, does not end our analysis. We do not join those Circuits that have interpreted
Swain
to immunize the use of peremptory challenges in each case from judicial scrutiny, regardless of the constitutional provision such inquiry seeks to enforce.
See United States v. Childress,
The Court, however, did not analyze the entire Constitution in
Swain.
Not until three years later did the Court extend the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of trial by an impartial jury to state criminal prosecutions.
See Duncan v. Louisiana,
All of the Court’s constitutional analysis focused on the Equal Protection Clause. We do not believe the single general reference was intended to remove this focus.
McCray v. Abrams,
The Sixth Amendment provides, in relevant part, 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, which district shall have been previously ascertained by law____” The model impartial jury is composed of jurors who are disinterested individuals, capable and willing to determine the facts based upon the evidence presented at trial.
See Irvin v. Dowd,
The Sixth Amendment does not require that each criminal petit jury “mirror the community and reflect the various distinctive groups in the population.”
Taylor,
In
Glasser v. United States,
Lest the right of trial by jury be nullified by the improper constitution of juries, the notion of what a proper jury is has become inextricably intertwined with the idea of jury trial.
Our notions of what a proper jury is have developed in harmony with our basic concepts of a democratic society and a representative government. For “It is part of the established tradition in the use of juries as instruments of public justice that the jury be a body truly representative of the community.” Smith v. Texas,311 U.S. 128 , 130,61 S.Ct. 164 , 165,85 L.Ed. 84 [1940].
Id.
at 85,
In perhaps the farthest extension of
Glasser1
s articulation of the cross-section principle underlying the “American tradition of trial by jury,” the Court in
Thiel v. Southern Pacific Co.,
Jury competence is an individual rather than a group or class matter. That fact lies at the very heart of the jury system. To disregard it is to open the door to class distinctions and discriminations which are abhorrent to the democratic ideals of trial by jury.
Id.
at 220,
Later the same year, the Court again invoked
Glasser1
s cross-section of the community principle and exercised its supervisory authority to reverse a federal criminal conviction by a jury from which women had
*769
been purposefully and systematically excluded.
Ballard v. United States,
[I]t is not enough to say that women when sitting as jurors neither act nor tend to act as a class. Men likewise do not act as a class. But, if the shoe were on the other foot, who would claim that a jury was truly representative of the community if all men were intentionally and systematically excluded from the panel? The truth is that the two sexes are not fungible; a community made up exclusively of one is different from a community composed of both; the subtle interplay of influence one on the other is among the imponderables. To insulate the courtroom from either may not in a given case make an iota of difference.
Id.
at 193-94,
[T]he exclusion of women from jury panels may at times be highly prejudicial to the defendants. But reversible error does not depend on a showing of prejudice in an individual case. The evil lies in the admitted exclusion of an eligible class or group in the community____ The injury is not limited to the defendant — there is injury to the jury system, to the law as an institution, to the community at large, and to the democratic ideal reflected in the processes of our courts.
Id.
at 195,
Collectively, Glasser, Thiel, and Ballard teach that an impartial jury is the product of jury selection methods that do not systematically exclude members of a distinct group from jury service. Competence of jury service is an individual rather than a group characteristic. The violation lies in the exclusionary conduct or policy, not in any documented partiality by a particular jury. Although the defendant may benefit by reversal of the verdict, it is the integrity of the judicial system and the public’s right to a democratically representative jury that are demonstrably impaired. These cases were decided before Duncan v. Louisiana applied the Sixth Amendment to the states. Review of subsequent instances in which the Court has applied the constitutional guarantee of an impartial jury to the states, however, reveals that the principles of Glasser, Thiel, and Ballard have been adopted and developed by the Court’s Sixth Amendment analysis.
In
Williams v. Florida,
[T]he essential feature of a jury obviously lies in the interposition between the accused and his accuser of the commonsense judgment of a group of laymen, and in the community participation and shared responsibility that results from the group’s determination of guilt or innocence.
Id.
In
Ballew v. Georgia,
In
Peters v. Kiff,
[W]e are unwilling to make the assumption that the exclusion of Negroes has relevance only for issues involving race. When any large and identifiable segment of the community is excluded from jury service, the effect is to remove from the jury room qualities of human nature and varieties of human experience, the range of which is unknown and perhaps unknowable. It is not necessary to assume that the excluded group will consistently vote as a class in order to conclude, as we do, that its exclusion deprives the jury of a perspective on human events that may have unsuspected importance in any case that may be presented.
Id.
at 503-04,
Taylor v. Louisiana,
Our review of the Supreme Court’s rationale for deciding these Sixth Amendment controversies leads to the following conclusions. The Sixth Amendment guarantees that a criminal charge will not be tried before a jury that fails to represent a cross-section of the community as a consequence of a method of jury selection that systematically excludes a cognizable group from jury service. Two rationales support this requirement. First, an impartial jury may protect the defendant from an improper conviction by bringing laypersons’ common sense to bear upon the evidence supporting the prosecution’s charges. Second, an impartial jury represents diverse elements of the community from which it is drawn and thereby makes a vital eontribution to public confidence in the integrity and democracy of the judicial system. The impartial jury provides its safeguards durmg trial and, more significantly, during its deliberations. It is during deliberation that the diverse experiences of the members of a properly constituted jury are brought to bear on the often subtle nuances involved in evaluating witnesses’ credibility and permissive inferences drawn from the evidence. Only in returning its verdict does the jury express the community’s decision to punish or free the defendant. In short, we conclude that not only the jury list and *771 the members of the venire, but also each individual criminal petit jury must be the product of selection methods that provide a fair possibility for obtaining a representative cross-section of the community.
IV.
We next make two determinations: the peremptory challenge is a jury selection tool that may be systematically used to exclude potential jurors solely because of their membership in a cognizable group; the nature of the peremptory challenge does not exempt its use from all judicial scrutiny under the Sixth Amendment. We then establish the threshold showing necessary to invoke judicial scrutiny, and the procedures that shall direct the trial court’s inquiry.
It is readily apparent that currently a party may use peremptory challenges systematically rather than individually. At present, nothing prevents the prosecutor or defense counsel from deciding, perhaps before voir dire begins, to exercise every peremptory challenge to excuse potential jurors who share a single characteristic. The Supreme Court has observed that a juror’s impartiality is a matter of his or her individual “state of mind,”
Irvin v. Dowd,
The nature of the peremptory challenge does not exempt its abuse from scrutiny under the Sixth Amendment. First, as the Court observed in Swain, the peremptory challenge is a statutory right that Con-
gress or any state legislature could abolish at will.
Swain,
Part III of the Swain opinion, although dictum, set forth the circumstances that a defendant would have to show in order to subject the prosecution’s use of per-emptories to inquiry by the court____ [Ejven the Swain Court did not believe that peremptory challenges are immune from remedial judicial action____
McCray v. Abrams,
The nature of the peremptory challenge, as explicated in
Swain,
and the nature of the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of an impartial jury do place two substantive limitations upon judicial inquiry into abuse of the peremptory challenge. First,
Swain
unequivocally states that peremptory challenges must not be scrutinized
individually
for reasonableness or sincerity.
Swain
teaches a second lesson about the nature of the peremptory challenge. It is a powerful tool with which to shape the jury that sits to determine guilt and innocence and, therefore, peremptory challenges should be authorized and controlled in a manner that insures “not only freedom from any bias against the accused, but also from any prejudice against his prosecution.”
Swain,
We conclude that a prosecutor’s systematic use of peremptory challenges to excuse members of a cognizable group from a criminal petit jury offends the Sixth Amendment’s protection of the defendant’s interest in a fair trial and the public’s interest in the integrity of judicial process, as well as the prosecutor’s special duty as “the servant of the law” to see that “guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer.”
Berger v. United States,
Our next task is to establish the procedures by which a Sixth Amendment violation arising out of an abuse of peremptory challenges will be demonstrated and remedied. In each case, the presumption will operate initially that both parties are exercising their peremptory challenges in a nondiscriminatory manner. To invoke the trial court’s authority to examine the use of peremptories, a party must make a timely motion for a mistrial. The time for such a motion will generally end upon the completion of the jury selection process.
*773 A party establishes a prima facie case of a Sixth Amendment violation when the party demonstrates that:
(1) the group alleged to be excluded is a cognizable group in the community, and
(2) there is a substantial likelihood that the challenges leading to this exclusion have been made on the basis of the individual venirepersons’ group affiliation rather than because of any indication of a possible inability to decide the case on the basis of the evidence presented.
McCray,
Only if the moving party establishes a prima facie showing of systematic abuse of peremptory challenges, which the trial court shall find on the record, does the burden shift to the non-moving party to respond to any inquiry concerning its exercise of that right. Preservation of the distinctive character of peremptory challenges requires that the non-moving party need not show a reason rising to the level of cause for excusing the prospective jurors in order to rebut the moving party’s prima facie case. As the Second Circuit has observed:
There are any number of bases on which a party may believe, not unreasonably, that a prospective juror may have some slight bias that would not support a challenge for cause but that would make excusing him or her desirable. Such reasons, if they appear to be genuine, should be accepted by the court, which will bear the responsibility of assessing the genuineness of the [non-moving party’s] response and of being alert to reasons that are pretextual.
McCray,
These measures will remove one more barrier to the realization of the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee that criminal charges will be tried to an impartial jury. The cost of this increased equity is minimal, particularly when weighed against the importance of maintaining the integrity of the jury system.
4
We concur in the Second Circuit’s expectation that the instances requiring invocation of these procedures will be rare, and its hope that the number will decline.
McCray,
V.
A review of the record reveals that the state trial judge and the parties followed the procedures we have established and the trial court found that the parties systematically exercised their peremptory challenges on the basis of race. The trial judge would have ordered a mistrial except that he did not deem himself empowered to do so. First, the defense counsel raised the issue through a timely motion for a mistrial, to which the trial court responded by conferring with both the prosecutor and the defense counsel. Second, each party identified the cognizable group that the other allegedly had systematically excused. The prosecution allegedly excused black prospective jurors, and the defense allegedly excused white prospective jurors. Third, the pattern of racial exclusion by each party establishes more than “a substantial likelihood” that the peremptory challenges were exercised on the basis of group affiliation. Twenty-two of the twenty-six peremptory challenges that the prosecutor exercised were used to excuse blacks. Thirty-seven of the forty peremptory challenges that the defendants exer *774 cised in combination were used to excuse whites.
Fourth, the trial court gave each party ample opportunity to rebut the allegations that it had systematically exercised its peremptory challenges to discriminate racially. The prosecutor openly acknowledged that he excused prospective jurors because of their race: defense counsel “gave it to me, so I’m going to give it to them.” Tr. at 381. The systematic nature of the prosecutor’s strategy became clear when he tacitly acknowledged reserving his peremptory challenges “until they had less challenges than I.” Tr. at 381. See also tr. at 385. Rather than describe any potential partiality that he suspected individual veniremen of harboring, the prosecutor attempted to excuse his conduct by claiming that the defense counsel “started the game, I had to play it.” Tr. at 386. See also tr. at 382. The prosecutor’s acknowledged conduct alone would justify a mistrial.
After evaluating the parties’ responses, and apparently rejecting the defense counsels’ claims as pretextual, the trial court found that both the prosecution and the defense had systematically exercised their peremptory challenges to exclude prospective jurors on the basis of race. It is clear that the state judge would have granted a mistrial if he had considered it an authorized alternative.
Let me indicate to you my personal observations.
I have noted, of course, that the Prosecutor has used his peremptory challenges for the most part to exclude black jurors.
By the same token the lawyers for the Defendants conversely used their peremptory challenges for the purpose of excluding white jurors.
Those are the observations that I have formed in the three days.
And my personal feeling is that I disagree with both of your strategy. And I think it is quite evident that you can get a fair jury with people of both races. And I don’t think there’s any argument about that.
However, I have no control over the challenges that the Prosecutor uses. When I say challenges, I mean peremptory. I have no control over the peremptory challenges that the defense lawyers use.
And I have no alternative under the existing law, I deny the motion for mistrial.
Tr. at 389-90. The trial court found the facts necessary to support the legal conclusion that the jury which resulted from the open battle of peremptory challenges was not impartial within the meaning of the Sixth Amendment.
Therefore, we reverse the district court and remand this case with directions to issue the writ Booker seeks unless the State of Michigan retries him within sixty days from the issuance of our mandate or within such further time as the district court may allow for good cause shown.
Notes
. In
Swain
the Court did suggest, in dicta, that a prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to excuse prospective jurors solely because of their race "in case after case" would violate the Fourteenth Amendment.
Swain,
. Three state supreme courts have abandoned
Swain,
under the authority of their state constitutions.
See State v. Neil,
. Although the supreme courts of Florida, Massachusetts, and California have departed from
Swain,
each has also recognized its two vital lessons. In
State v. Neil,
. We do not share the Seventh Circuit's view that voir dire will regularly become "a Title VII proceeding in miniature.”
United States v. Clark,
