OPINION ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
Appellant was convicted by a jury of capital murder. TEX.PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.03(a)(1). The jury assessed his рunishment at confinement for life in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division. On direct appeal, ap
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pellant argued that the State systematically excluded blacks from the jury which sat in his case. The Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment, holding that, “since Mead is white and his complaint relates to thе prosecutor’s peremptory challenges of black jurors, we find that hе has not presented a prima facie case of a violation of his right to equal protection.”
Mead v. State,
We granted appellant’s petition on the following ground for review:
“The Court of Appeals erred in holding a white appellant may not avail himself of protection given to a black apрellant to have a jury free from impermissible race exclusion through pеremptory challenges exercised by the State as guaranteed by the United States Supreme Court in Batson v. Kentucky,476 U.S. 79 ,106 S.Ct. 1712 ,90 L.Ed.2d 69 (1986). This ruling of the Court of Appeals is contrary to the Due Process, Representative Cross Section and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and Article I, § 10 & 19 of the Texas Constitution.”
We will sustain appellant’s ground for review.
Prior to the beginning of appellant’s trial, he filed a pretrial motion to “Prohibit the State from Using Peremptory Challenges to Strike Members of a Cognizable Racial Group.” The trial court denied this motion. The trial court also denied appellant’s request fоr hearings into the State’s motives as to why each of the black jurors was struck. Whеn appellant argued to the Court of Appeals that the trial court erred when it permitted the prosecution to exclude blacks from the jury, the Court of Appeals overruled appellant’s argument because he wаs a white appellant complaining of the exclusion of black jurors.
Mead v. State,
Whеn the Court of Appeals wrote and issued its opinion in this cause, it did not have the benefit of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Powers v. Ohio,
— U.S. -,
In Powers, the Supreme Court held that “the Equal Protection Clause prohibits a рrosecutor from using the State’s peremptory challenges to exclude otherwise qualified and unbiased persons from the petit jury solely by reason of their race, a practice that forecloses a significant opportunity to participate in civic life. An individual juror does not have a right tо sit on any particular petit jury, but he or she does possess the right not to be excluded from one on account of race.”
Powers,
Because of
Powers
it was error to hold that thе appellant could not make an equal protection claim bеcause he was white and the prospective jurors were black. Since the Court of Appeals did not have the benefit of the Supreme Court’s guidance in the
Powers
decision, we must reverse this judgment and remand this cause to the Court of Appeals for further consideration of appellant’s equal protection argument in
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light of
Powers v. Ohio.
See
Salazar v. State,
