UPON A REHEARING EN BANC
A jury сonvicted Rodney William Lightfoot of three counts of robbery, three counts of using a firearm in the commission of a felony, and being armed while entering a bank with the intent to commit larceny. At trial, Lightfoot made a
Batson
motion in response to the Commonwealth’s use of peremptory strikes to remove two African-American women from the venire, which the trial court denied.
See Batson v. Kentucky,
I. BACKGROUND
Three African-Americans, one male and two females, were included in the venire of twenty potential jurors (after three individuals were released for cause). Using two of its four peremptory strikes, the Commonwealth struck the two African-American females from the venire after completion of voir dire. One was Wanda Mead. The record does not reveal the identity of the second African-American female. The African-American male remained on the jury panel.
During voir dire, 1 the Commonwealth asked, inter alia, if any of the potential jurors had friends or relatives who had *726 been charged with crimes in the past. Two individuals on the venire responded affirmatively, Mead and Thomas Ewing, a Caucasian. Mead stated that a family member had been charged with a traffic offense. Ewing explained that his daughtеr had been charged with a felony. Like Mead, Ewing was subsequently struck by the Commonwealth. Additionally, in response to a follow-up question by the Commonwealth, an unidentified female on the panel indicated familiarity with one of the Commonweаlth’s witnesses.
A number of potential jurors also gave affirmative responses to questions by Lightfoot’s counsel, indicating a potential for bias. Some of those respondents are unidentified from the record. One unidentified individual stated that hе or she went to high school with Lightfoot. Mead also revealed at that time she had visited someone in jail or prison.
After voir dire was completed and the parties exercised their peremptory strikes, Lightfoot made a Batson motion on the grounds the Commonwealth had used two of its four strikes to remove two of the three African-Americans. In further support of the motion (apart from simply pointing to these numbers), Lightfoot’s counsel asserted that the Commonwealth did not question eithеr of the two African-American women, whom it struck, and that neither of them responded during voir dire to any of the questions posed by the parties’ respective counsel or the trial court. Such circumstances, according to Lightfoot, indicаted the Commonwealth improperly struck these two African-Americans based on race.
The Commonwealth denied the assertion of Lightfoot’s counsel that the two African-American women did not respond to questioning during voir dire, pointing specifically to Mead’s affirmative response to the prosecutor’s questioning, along with Ewing, resulting in both being struck by the Commonwealth. The trial court agreed with the Common *727 wealth, finding that Lightfoot’s counsel was “not correct” in that assertion. Thе trial court also ultimately agreed with the Commonwealth that Lightfoot had not established a prima facie case of purposeful discrimination under Batson “based on what [his counsel had] articulated.”
II. ANALYSIS
A.
The United States Supreme Court held in
Batson
that the peremptory exclusion of a potential juror based solely on the juror’s race “is purposeful discrimination and a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.”
Jackson v. Commonwealth,
*728
The trial court’s finding in the instant case that Light-foot failed to establish a
prima facie
case of racial discrimination
3
under step one of
Batson
“is entitled to great deference” on appeal.
Johnson v. Commonwealth,
“To establish a
prima facie
case, the defendant must ... ‘identify facts and circumstances that raise an inference that potential jurors were excluded based on their race.’”
Juniper,
*730 B.
In this case, we cannot say the trial court was clearly erroneous in its determination that Lightfoot failed to establish a prima facie case under Batson—i.e., finding that the relevant faсts and circumstances did not give rise to an inference the Commonwealth was engaged in purposeful racial discrimination when it struck the two African-American women.
(i) Mead
As to Mead, the record amply supports the trial court’s ruling. Lightfoot identified no facts or circumstances for the strike from which a discriminatory motive could be inferred. Indeed, the only reason apparent from the record for striking Mead is the same race-neutral reason that would explain the strike of Ewing, a Caucasian. They were the only two potential jurors who responded affirmatively when the Commonwealth asked if anyone on the venire had friends or relatives who had been charged with crimes in the past. In addition, Mеad stated during defense counsel’s
voir dire
that she had visited someone in jail or prison. It is well established that a court considering a
Batson
motion at step one “may consider apparent reasons for the challenges discernible on thе record, regardless of whether those reasons were the actual reasons for the challenge.”
United States v. Stephens,
Furthermore, none of the prosecutor’s questions or statements during
voir dire
“indicated [he] was of a mind to discriminate in [his] exercise of peremptory strikes,”
Johnson,
(ii) Unidentified Africanr-American Woman
As to the other African-American woman struck by the Commonwealth, Lightfoot does not present a sufficient record upon which we can determine whether the trial court committed the alleged error. The record does not reveal her identity, nor does it reveal her responses, if аny, during
voir dire.
We can discern from the record, however, that during
voir dire
a number of unidentified potential jurors responded affirmatively to questioning, providing race-neutral reasons for striking those respondents.
5
Any one of those respondents may have been the unidentified African-American woman. Oncе again, evidence in the record of “entirely plausible reasons, independent of race,” for exercising a peremptory strike implies that racial bias did not motivate the prosecutor,
*732
thus negating a claim of purposeful racial discrimination under step one of a
Batson
challenge.
Wade,
Lightfoot has thus failed in his “burden of producing a record that supports a
prima facie
case of purposeful discrimination” in the Commonwealth’s peremptory strike of the unidentified African-American woman.
Johnson,
For these reasons, we affirm Lightfoot’s convictions.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The trial judge first asked the potential jurors a series of questions, resulting in two individuals being released for cause. The third individ *726 ual was released for cause during voir dire conducted by defense counsel.
. A propоnent of a peremptory strike sometimes proceeds to step two (offering an explanation for the strike) before the trial court makes a
*728
step one determination, at which time the court makes a step two ruling withоut having decided if a
prima facie
case was established under step one. On appeal, such a case is reviewed under step two of
Batson,
without regard to whether a
prima facie
case was made, because that issue is deemed waived.
See Hernandez
v.
New York,
Here, the prosecutor stated his reasons for striking Mead when explaining to the trial court that Meаd did, in fact, respond affirmatively to one of his questions during voir dire, contrary to defense counsel’s assertion. (The reasons given were the same as those apparent on the record for striking her. See infra, Part II(B)(i)). The prosecutor did so in the context of asserting that Lightfoot had made no step one prima facie showing, and the trial court made the step one determination, which was dispositive. Therefore, our review is necessarily limited to that step one determination.
. Lightfoot contends on appeal he established a
prima facie
case of both racial and gender discrimination in the Commonwealth’s exercise of peremptory strikes to remove the two African-American women.
See J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.,
.
See Batson,
. As noted above, one unidentified potential juror, for example, revealed that he or she went to high school with Lightfoot.
