Thе defendants, Lawrence Capers and Leonard Capers, appeal from the denial of their habeas corpus petition by the district court. Because the defendants failed to establish a prima facie showing of purposeful discrimination in the state’s use of peremptory challengеs, we AFFIRM.
I. BACKGROUND
The defendants were convicted by a Florida jury of three counts of third degree murder. The charged offenses occurred during the McDuffie riots, a series of civil disturbances in Dade County precipitated by the acquittal of several white police officers charged with the homicide of a black man. At the defendants’ joint trial, the state was allowed forty peremptory challenges. The prosecutor exercised twenty-seven challenges, of which twenty were used to excuse black prospective jurors. One prospective juror who was black was accepted by the state, but removed by counsel for one of the codefendants tried jointly with Lawrence and Leonard Capers. The selected jury included three black persons, one of whom served-as foreman. At the time of trial, black persons comprised 15% of Dade County’s population.
The defendants objected tо each use of the state’s peremptory challenges to remove potential jurors who were black. During voir dire and at the completion of jury selection, the defendants moved for an evidentiary hearing to present evidence of a systematic exclusion of black persons from jury sеrvice in violation of
Swain v. Alabama,
II. DISCUSSION
In
Swain v. Alabama,
the Supreme Court considered the degree to which the equal protection clause limits the state’s ability to exercise peremptory challenges.
2
The Court recognized that, historically, peremptory challenges were exercised secretly and could be used for any reason, or for no reason at all.
Swain,
This court has outlined the elements of a claim that the state has used its peremptory challenges in violation of Swain.
[The] petitioner must prove on specific facts that [the prosecutor] had a systematic and intentional practice of excluding blacks from traverse juries in criminal trials through the exercise of peremptory challenges, and that this practice continued unabated in petitioner’s trial. The exclusion must have occurred “in case after case, whatever the circumstances, whatever the crime and whoever the defendant [or the victim] may be.” Swain,380 U.S. at 223 ,85 S.Ct. at 837 . Petitioner is not required to show that the prosecutor always struck every black venireman offered to him, [United States v. Pearson,448 F.2d 1207 , 1217 (5th Cir.1971) ], but the facts must manifestly show an intent on the part of the prоsecutor to disenfranchise blacks from traverse juries in criminal trials in his circuit....
Willis v. Zant,
The district court rejected the requests for an evidentiary hearing on the ground that the defendants failed to offer a prima facie case that the alleged systematic exclusion of black citizens from petit juries “continuеd unabated” in the defendants’ trial.
Willis,
By using its remaining challenges, the prosecution could have removed the three black persons who served upon the jury. The defendants contend that the district court erred by considering the number of black jurors who were empaneled without challenge. The presence of black persons on the empaneled jury is, of course, not déterminative in a
Swain
claim.
Willis,
Any inference of intentional discrimination that might arise from the number of peremptory strikes exercised against black potential jurors is further rebutted by evident, racially neutral justifications for the majority of the state’s peremptory challenges. Ten of the black potential jurors who were struck responded during voir dire that they were sympathetic to the defendants’ actions and blamed the riot upon the failure of the criminal justice system to convict McDuffie’s killers. Two potential jurors related incidents suggesting an antagonism towards the police. One person responded that he preferred not to be a juror in the case. One potential juror had been charged with and sentenced for a manslaughter offense that she claimed was committed in self-defense. Of the remaining six black potential jurors, four responded either that they had transportation problems, difficulties posed by medical conditions or by a limited understanding of English, or that jury service would be a hardship because they were caretakers for young children. When combined with the number of black jurors not challenged by the state, the existence of plausible, raсially neutral bases for the state's exercise of peremptory challenges, apparent on the record, is sufficient to nullify any inference of discrimination that otherwise might be drawn from the number of strikes used to remove black potential jurors.
The defendants argue that the district court erred in cоnsidering the prosecutor’s probable reasons for removing black potential jurors without holding an evidentiary hearing to allow the defendants to develop their showing of a
Swain
violation. Specifically, the defendants desired to question the prosecutor regarding his reasons for exercising perеmptory challenges against black jurors. Such an evi-dentiary hearing would be warranted only if the defendants had established a prima facie case with regard to both elements of a
Swain
claim as set out in
Willis,
The defendants did not augment their attempt to show the intentional exclusion of black potential jurors in their- trial with any direct evidence of discriminatory intent, such as the commentary or questions of the prosecutor during voir dire.
See Allison,
III. CONCLUSION
With regard tо the requirement that the prosecutor’s alleged practice of systematic discrimination continued into the defendants’ trial, the defendants proffered only the number of peremptory challenges exercised against black potential jurors as compared to the number exercised аgainst potential jurors who were white.' We need not decide whether, standing alone, such a showing would satisfy a defendant’s burden with regard to this element of a Swain violation. Here, any inference of discrimination that might arise from the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges is negated by the unchallenged presence of black jurors and the record of voir dire, which reveals various nondiscriminatory rationale for the state's challenges.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The written request for an evidentiary hearing included a copy of a report of the Governor’s Commission formed in the wake of the McDuf-fie riots concluding thаt certain assistant state attorneys were guilty of excluding jurors based upon race. There is no suggestion that the attorneys who prosecuted the defendants were those accused of discrimination in the report. The defendants also proffered documents regarding the use of peremptory challengеs by other assistant state attorneys in six cases tried in Dade County. Finally, the defendants offered affidavits from four attorneys practicing in Dade County stating that Dade County prosecutors generally used peremptory challenges to remove black persons from petit juries. The district court concluded that this evidence was insufficient to establish a prima facie case of historical systematic discrimination, the first element under Swain. It is unnecessary for us to resolve this issue.
. A portion of
Swain
was overruled in
Batson v. Kentucky,
. By contrast, in
Love v. Jones,
. Similarly, the number of black jurors accepted by the prosecutor in previous trials, despite available peremptory challenges, may preclude a petitioner from establishing the first element of a
Swain
violation: history of intentional, systematic exclusion of black persons from petit juries.
Willis v. Kemp,
