dissenting to Refusal of State’s Petition for Discretionary Review.
This is yet another ease in which a legally and factually guilty and fairly tried defendant s criminal conviction has been reversed on appeal for
Batson
error. See
Batson v. Kentucky,
The State has filed a petition for discretionary review claiming among other things that the Court of Appeals failed to follow controlling United States Supreme Court precedent. This Court has decided not to exercise its discretion to review the decision of the Court of Appeals. I believe we should exercise our discretion to review this decision for several reasons.
One reason we should grant discretionary review in this case is to acknowledge that some of this Court’s earlier
Batson
jurisprudence is clearly inconsistent with subsequent United States Supreme Court federal constitutional jurisprudence in this area, in particular the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Purkett v. Elem,
In this case the prosecutor explained he peremptorily struck the veniremember based “on information provided by law enforcement officers who commented that this panel member would not make a good juror.” Relying on this Court’s opinion in
Williams v. State,
the Court of Appeals decided the prosecutor’s explanation for the strike had to be “clear and reasonably specific” and had to contain “legitimate reasons” related to the case being tried.
Williams v. State,
Contrary to what this Court said in
Williams, Purkett
makes clear that the second step of the
“Batson
process” does not require a “clear and reasonably specific” explanation containing “legitimate reasons” related to the ease being tried. See
Purkett,
In addition to this, many of this Court’s decisions suggest that once a defendant establishes a “prima facie case of racial discrimination” in step one of the
“Batson
process,” there is a “presumption” of racial discrimination and the “burden of proof’ shifts to the prosecution to offer a race-neutral explanation in step two of this process. See, e.g.,
Lewis v. State,
Establishing a step one prima facie case is not synonymous with establishing a “presumption” or a shifting of the “burden of proof.” See
Purkett,
at 767,
When cases like
Lewis
and
Keeton
talk about “presumptions” and shifting of the “burden of proof,” they effectively prevent the trial court from deciding in step three whether the opponent of the strike proved “purposeful discrimination.” But see
Purkett,
at 767,
I also would grant discretionary review in this case to emphasize that the applicable “clearly erroneous” standard of appellate review to a trial court’s ruling on a
Batson
claim is a highly deferential standard. See
Hernandez v. New York,
Finally, there is no evidence in this record of “purposeful discrimination.” This record contains a facially race-neutral explanation for the prosecution’s peremptory strike. As the Court of Appeals noted, the record is otherwise silent as to the reasons for the strike. A silent record usually is fatal to the party whose burden it is to establish reversible error on appeal. See Tex.R.App.Proe. 50(d) (burden is on appellant to present a sufficient record showing error requiring reversal). On this record and under the applicable deferential standard of review, appellant has not carried his burden of showing the trial court’s ruling on his Batson claim was “clearly erroneous.”
Because this Court’s earlier federal constitutional precedents are so clearly inconsis *777 tent with current federal constitutional law, I urge the intermediate appellate courts to follow Purkett when reviewing a trial court’s ruling on a Batson claim because that is their clear duty under Article VI of the United States Constitution. I dissent to the refusal of the State’s petition for discretionary review.
Notes
. The decision for the intermediate appellate courts to make seems clear under Article VI of the United States Constitution.
. See
Casarez v. State,
.'Williams and Keeton as well as the other decisions discussed in this opinion were decided as a matter of federal constitutional law, not as a matter of state law. When interpreting and applying federal constitutional law, we are not at liberty to disregard controlling United States Supreme Court authority just because some of us may not agree with it and even if doing so is more protective of criminal defendants.
. In this case the Court of Appeals relied on Keeton to decide the prosecution did not "present any evidence [in step two] that could be used to overcome the presumption of discrimination and show neutrality,” and the Court of Appeals relied on Lewis to decide "once the State offers a neutral explanation [step two], the burden shifts back to the defendant [step three] to persuade the trial court that the State’s purported reasons for its peremptory strikes are mere pretext and are in fact racially motivated.” (Emphasis Supplied).
. Cf.
Purkett,
