Following a jury trial, appellant, Kenneth Bernard Lewis, was convicted of second degree murder and the use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. On appeal, he contends that the trial court erred in refusing to consider a Batson motion he made after the jury was sworn and the remaining venirepersons were excused. Finding no error, we affirm.
Following
voir dire,
a panel of twenty prospective jurors stood ready to try appellant. Peremptory challenges were made, a jury of twelve was sworn, and the remaining venirepersons were excused. Appellant then, for the first time, raised a challenge under
Batson v. Kentucky,
The United States Supreme Court has not specifically defined temporal parameters for the making of a
Batson
motion. Instead, the
Most courts, however, hold that a party must raise a
Batson
challenge prior to the time the jury is sworn and the remaining venirepersons are excused.
See McCrory v. Henderson,
In Virginia, a
Batson
motion is not waived by the defendant’s failure to raise it prior to the swearing of the jury.
Hill v. Berry,
The record shows that appellant had ample opportunity to raise his Batson challenge before the jury was sworn and the remaining venirepersons were discharged. 4 The record shows that appellant knew which prospective jurors the Commonwealth struck prior to the strikes having been announced. Manifestly, appellant knew which prospective jurors the Commonwealth struck as the strikes were announced, and he certainly knew which prospective jurors the Commonwealth had struck after the strikes were announced, the stricken jurors left their seats, and the jury assembled in the box. Neither the record, nor appellant, suggests that information concerning the Commonwealth’s strikes was unavailable to appellant at that time, and no reading of the record suggests that appellant was otherwise prevented from raising his challenge. In short, appellant had all the information and opportunity he needed to raise his challenge before the jury was sworn and the remaining venirepersons dismissed. As such, the record fails to support appellant’s contention that the trial court should have granted him leave to raise his challenge.
By contrast, the circumstances the trial court faced in this case provided ample basis for its decision not to grant leave. The choice of remedy upon sustaining a
Batson
chal
lenge lies within the discretion of the trial court.
Coleman v. Hogan,
In this case, the timing of appellant’s challenge limited the court’s choice of remedy and frustrated the trial court’s ability to address the equal protection violation appellant sought to remedy.
See Parker,
In addition to leaving the court an incomplete remedy with respect to the jurors improperly excluded, the untimely motion in this case limited the court’s ability to weigh the expenditure of additional judicial resources and the ensuing, perhaps substantial, delay in the administration of justice which can follow a decision to strike the venire upon sustaining a Batson challenge. When balanced against a record which makes manifest that, notwithstanding the Batson claim, the appellant was given a fair trial by a jury which was free from exception, it cannot be said the trial court’s decision to preserve judicial resources and avoid a delay in the administration of justice constitutes an abuse of discretion.
In short, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying appellant leave to raise Batson issues after the jury was sworn; therefore, we affirm the trial court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant proffered his prima facie case of discrimination, alleging that three of the four venirepersons whom the Commonwealth struck were African-Americans and that none of them had made comments or given answers during voir dire which would have provided a basis other than race for their exclusion. On brief, appellant predominantly argues the merits of his Batson claim and the trial court's error in denying it. It bears emphasis, however, that the trial court did not deny appellant's motion on the merits; rather, it refused to consider the motion. The issue on appeal is whether, as appellant also contends, the trial court erred in refusing to consider his Batson motion.
. Moreover, as the Court in Parker explained:
Quashing the panel and commencing the jury selection process anew does not really correct the error. The defendant is simply accorded a new opportunity to obtain a jury composed according to race-neutral criterion; the discrimination endured by the excluded venirepersons goes completely unredressed since they remain wrongfully excluded from jury service.
Requiring defendants to make Batson challenges prior to the venire's dismissal, on the other hand, allows the trial court to determine whether a constitutional violation has occurred while there remains time to correct the error by disallowing the offending strike.
. Code § 8.01-352(A) provides:
Prior to the jury being sworn, the following objections may be made without leave of court: (i) an objection specifically pointing out the irregularity in any list or lists of jurors made by the clerk from names drawn from the jury box, or in the drawing, summoning, returning, or impaneling of jurors or in copying or signing or failing to sign the list, and (ii) an objection to any juror on account of any legal disability; after the jury is sworn such objection shall be made only with leave of court.
. In argument, appellant's counsel explained that, in order to avoid interrupting the trial judge who was proceeding quickly through the jury selection process, he deferred making his
Batson
motion in anticipation of the trial court’s inquiry in accordance with the recommended procedure outlined in the
Virginia Circuit Court Benchbook.
He cites, in particular, the procedure directing the court to ask counsel after the juror strikes are announced and before the jury is sworn whether there are "any objections to the strikes or the panel.”
See, e.g., Cudjoe v. Commonwealth, 23
Va.App. 193, 199,
