Jerry Mahaffey burglarized a home in which he murdered one person, raped and murdered another, and attempted to murder a third. In seeking relief from his life sentence, he contests not that he is actually innocent of these crimes, but that he deserves a new trial because the prosecution improperly used peremptory challenges to exclude members of his race from the jury. But the state court found that the prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges was motivated by legitimate, race-neutral concerns. As this finding was not clearly unreasonable, we affirm the district court’s denial of Mahaffey’s habeas petition.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1983, Mahaffey burglarized a home in which he murdered Dean Pueschel, raped and murdered Jo Ellen Pueschel, and attempted to murder, by beating and stabbing, their eleven-year-old son Richard. The evidence of Mahaffey’s guilt of these crimes is overwhelming, including Richard’s identification of Mahaffey, Mahaffey’s confession, and that property taken from the Pueschel home was found in Mahaffey’s home. Indeed, Mahaffey’s attorney admitted at oral argument that the State of Illinois “can prove its case” even now, almost three decades later, were we to order a new trial. But Mahaffey seeks relief not because he is actually innocent of the crimes, but because he claims the prosecution violated the Fourteenth Amendment by excluding blacks from the jury on account of their race.
Mahaffey is black, the victims were white, and the jury that convicted Mahaffey was all white except for one Asian-American. While Mahaffey’s direct appeal
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to the Illinois Supreme Court was pending, the United States Supreme Court decided
Batson v. Kentucky,
On November 21, 2006, Mahaffey filed in the federal district court a “motion to reinstate” the 1995 habeas petition’s Batson claim, which the district court promptly granted. On February 19, 2008, Mahaffey filed a “memorandum” in support of his Batson claim. The district court then dismissed Mahaffey’s habeas petition as untimely, construing the memorandum, not the motion to reinstate, as his new substantive habeas petition. It then granted a certificate of appealability as to the timeliness of Mahaffey’s habeas petition and the merits of his Batson claim.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Timeliness of Habeas Petition
We review the district court’s denial of Mahaffey’s habeas petition as barred by the statute of limitations de novo.
Lo v. Endicott,
The motion to reinstate, not the memorandum, constituted the habeas petition and so it was not time barred. Habeas petitions must state the relief requested, specify the ground for relief, and state *1145 the facts supporting the ground for relief. See Rule 2(c) of the Rules Governing § 2254 Cases. Mahaffey’s motion to reinstate stated the relief requested, where it said “Petitioner ... requests that this Court ... grant the petition pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.” Mot. to Reinstate at 1. It also specified the ground for relief, where it said “the State’s use of peremptory challenges to exclude blacks from the jury violated petitioner’s right to equal protection of law as guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” Id. The remaining issue is whether the motion “state[d] the facts supporting” his Fourteenth Amendment challenge as required by Habeas Rule 2(c), ie., whether it provided sufficient factual support to challenge the second Batson hearing’s holding that the prosecutor’s race-neutral explanations for striking particular jurors are credible.
We did not address this issue of habeas petition pleading standards in
Coulter,
Given when Mahaffey filed his new habeas petition in the form of his motion to reinstate, we hold that the district court erred when it denied Mahaffey’s petition for failure to meet the statute of limitations. So we need not reach Mahaffey’s alternative argument that the district court should have equitably tolled the statute of limitations in his favor.
B. Merits of Batson Claim
At this point we could remand Mahaffey’s case to the district court. But instead we proceed with the merits here, because they were fully briefed by both parties and we are equally positioned with the district court to evaluate Mahaffey’s
Batson
claim based solely on the state record.
See Cone v. Bell,
— U.S. -,
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We do not consider denying Mahaffey’s petition on the ground that the prosecution’s claimed errors were harmless— i.e., that any juror, black or white, would have convicted Mahaffey by attending to the overwhelming horrific evidence against him — because the State of Illinois failed to pursue this argument. Although the State noted that “it is unlikely in the extreme that race played a role in [Mahaffey’s] conviction,” Respondent-Appellee’s Br. at 54, it devoted only one paragraph to the harmless-error argument and cited, against a significant amount of contrary authority, no potentially helpful authority. Perfunctory, undeveloped arguments without discussion or citation to pertinent legal authority are waived.
United States v. Haynes,
So we are left to determine whether the Illinois trial court’s determination that the prosecution’s race-neutral explanations were true was “an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.”
Miller-El,
As we discussed above, the numbers describing the prosecution’s use of peremptories are remarkable. However, while happenstance may be “unlikely to produce this disparity,”
Miller-El,
Indeed, Mahaffey devotes most of the merits portions of his briefs in arguing
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that the prosecution’s explanations are pretextual for four of the black jurors it dismissed (Mahaffey has abandoned any claims regarding the remaining three): Angela Mack, Nathaniel Howard, Bea Marshburn, and Catherine Taylor. The prosecutor offered the following race-neutral explanations for dismissing these four jurors: (1) Mack worked for a police department; (2) Howard would suffer hardship because he cared for his invalid mother-in-law, including lifting her from bed “like a baby”; (3) Marshburn had a background in psychology; and (4) Taylor had poor communication skills. These race-neutral reasons are unquestionably valid.
See Purkett v. Elem,
Nor does Mahaffey show pretext by showing that other explanations by the prosecution were inconsistent. Specifically, the prosecution said it also excluded Taylor because she equivocated about the weight she would give police testimony, about whether she would follow the court’s instructions, and about whether she would set aside what she previously knew about the case. But the prosecution gave all its proffered reasons when required to do so at the second
Batson
hearing, and gave these reasons second, after emphasizing the primacy of Taylor’s lack of communication skills. 8 Supplement to R. on Appeal at 13-15. Nothing in the record suggests that these explanations were pretextual, as opposed to “secondary reasons” as the State of Illinois contends. Respondenh-Appellee’s Br. at 49;
cf. Miller-El,
The prosecution also added secondarily that it excluded Taylor because “she had a preconceived notion that under certain circumstances certain crimes should be punished by the death penalty,” and excluded Mack because she stated that “the defendant should prove his own innocence.”
Id.
at 15, 22. Mahaffey finds these reasons
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“obviously pretextual,” Reply Br. at 20, 22, because “a prosecutor would clearly desire to have a person with these views on the jury.” Mahaffey’s Br. at 36;
see also id.
at 31. But this argument assumes that prosecutors in general do not want fair trials — a proposition we do not accept. Indeed, the prosecution explained that it wanted jurors who would “follow the law.” 8 Supplement to R. on Appeal at 15, 22. Anyway, we find this reason not so clearly “improbable” as to discredit the Illinois trial court’s determination that this or the other more primary race-neutral justifications offered by the prosecutor were credible.
Miller-El v. Cockrell,
Finally, Mahaffey urges that the prosecution’s explanations changed over time, and that the prosecutor’s opening statement and closing argument took advantage of the racial sensitivity of the case and the racial composition of the jury. We find no support for these arguments in the record.
For the reasons discussed above, we hold that the Illinois Court did not clearly err in finding that Mahaffey failed to meet his burden of proving purposeful discrimination.
III. CONCLUSION
Mahaffey’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus was timely but unmeritorious. We therefore Affirm the district court’s denial of the writ.
