Buster O’Neal appeals his conviction for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute. Among his enumerations, he claims the trial court erred in granting the state’s challenge to his use of peremptory strikes against white jurors. See
Georgia v. McCollum,
1. O’Neal asserts the court erred in upholding the state’s objection to peremptory strikes he used against two white prospective jurors. O’Neal, who is African-American, used ten of twelve peremptory strikes against white panelists. The trial court analyzed the state’s challenge to these strikes by requiring O’Neal to explain his strikes. Then, in one step, the trial court determined both the neutrality and credibility of O’Neal’s proffered reasons for his peremptory strikes.
In earlier cases, the approach used by the trial court was tacitly approved by the appellate courts of this state. See
McKibbons v. State,
In this case, after the state challenged O’Neal’s strikes, the trial court properly required O’Neal to give race-neutral explanations for those strikes. Therefore, whether the state made out a prima facie case of discrimination is a moot issue. See
Lewis v. State,
The court accepted as race-neutral all but two of O’Neal’s explanations. Regarding those two panelists, O’Neal explained he struck one white male venireman because he was retired from Southern Bell, his eyes were wandering around the courtroom, he appeared to have a “lackadaisical” attitude, and his wife worked at a church daycare center. A second white panel member was excused because she was retired from an Air Force base, was divorced, and knew another prospective juror. O’Neal added that he felt both these panelists displayed “an attitude” toward him. The court reseated these panelists on the jury.
The trial transcript and the trial court’s order on O’Neal’s motion for new trial show the court did not accept as race-neutral O’Neal’s proffered reasons for striking these jurors. As we are bound by
Purkett
and
Jackson,
we must find the court erred in refusing to do so. A strike based on a party’s employment status or marital status is not, on its face, racially discriminatory.
Trice v. State,
As established by
Jackson,
the proper procedure for a trial court to follow in analyzing a party’s reason for its peremptory strike is to accept the strike if it is facially neutral, then require the opponent of the strike to prove that the proffered reason is merely a pretext for discrimination. In this case, the trial court simply ruled that O’Neal’s proffered reasons were not race-neutral. Its ruling indicates the trial court likely combined steps two and three of the test and found the reasons given were pretextual. However,
Jackson
dictates that the
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trial court must engage in the three-part analysis and abide by the shifting burdens of proof set forth in
Purkett.
To combine the steps, the Court has held, improperly shifts the ultimate burden of proof to the striking party.
Jackson,
supra at 898-899. The record in this case does not clearly establish that the trial court applied each prong of the three-part test. Under these circumstances, the Supreme Court of Georgia has concluded that the jury including the two reseated jurors was illegal, and O’Neal’s conviction must be reversed and this matter remanded for a new trial. See
Malone v. State,
2. Because the issue may arise on retrial, we consider O’Neal’s claim that the court erroneously admitted “similar transactions” evidence of a 1992 incident for which O’Neal was convicted of possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.
The state produced evidence showing that in August 1992, O’Neal was confronted by police outside the same apartment complex involved in this case. He fled. Police chased him into an apartment, where he unsuccessfully attempted to flush 42 small plastic bags of crack cocaine down the toilet. In this case, O’Neal allegedly fled from police and threw a bag containing 81 rocks of crack cocaine into the air. An officer involved in the 1992 arrest testified the cocaine seized in the two incidents was similarly packaged. These two incidents are sufficiently similar to authorize the trial court to admit evidence of the earlier incident to show O’Neal’s motive and intent. See
Okongwu v. State,
3. In light of our holding in Division 1, we need not address O’Neal’s remaining enumerations of error.
Judgment reversed and remanded for new trial.
