Over thirty years ago, Wanda Wadle (“Wadle”) was murdered in her apartment. A jury convicted Petitioner-Appellant Jonathan Bruce Reed (“Reed”) of capital murder for this crime. Reed now seeks habe-as corpus relief from his conviction and sentence of death. This case has spent three decades winding its way through the state and federal court systems. Today, we add to that lengthy history by concluding that Reed is entitled to habeas corpus relief for his Batson claim. We therefore reverse and remand to the district court with instructions to grant the writ and order Reed’s release from custody unless the State grants him a new trial within 120 days from the date the district court’s order.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
We have previously described the facts of the crime and the lengthy procedural history of this ease:
Around 12:40 p.m. on November 1, 1978, Kimberly Pursley (“Pursley”), Wa-dle’s roommate, returned to their shared apartment. As Pursley entered the apartment, she heard a man’s voice from Wadle’s bedroom say “don’t come in here” and “stay out there.” Pursley remained in the living room. After a few moments, a man stepped out of the bedroom and snapped closed a knife sheath. The man stated that he was from maintenance and was there to check the air filter, and he pointed toward the ceiling. Pursley looked toward*366 the ceiling and then noticed her roommate’s nude body on the floor of the bedroom. The man then threw Pursley to the floor and bound and gagged her. He asked if she had any money, and Pursley nodded yes. The man began to search Pursley and Wadle’s purses, which were located on the living room sofa. He made several circuits of the apartment during which he drank water from a glass in the kitchen and looked through the bedroom and living room areas. He then attempted to strangle Pursley, straddling her with his legs and grabbing her throat. Pursley feigned unconsciousness. The man released her throat and left the apartment.
Pursley managed to free herself from her bindings and went to check Wadle, whom she found with blood oozing from her mouth, her gaze fixed, and her hands tied with a telephone cord. Around Wadle’s head were a plastic bag and belt pulled taut. Pursley went outside her apartment to call for help. A neighbor, Rosemary Asencio (“Asen-cio”), appeared and let Pursley into her apartment to call the police while she went to investigate Wadle’s condition. Asencio found Wadle lying naked on her back with her legs spread apart and her head and shoulders under the bed. As-encio managed to remove the plastic bag and belt from Wadle’s neck and began CPR. Emergency medical technicians arrived and took Wadle to the hospital, where she died nine days later without ever regaining consciousness.
Pursley identified Reed as her assailant in a corporeal lineup. At the same lineup, two other residents of Pursley and Wadle’s apartment complex identified Reed as a person they had seen in the complex shortly before the time of the murder. These residents, Mikki Flanagan (“Flanagan”) and Phil Hardin (“Hardin”), as well as Pursley, subsequently testified at Reed’s trial. Flanagan testified that Reed came to her door shortly after noon on November 1, 1978, claiming that he was there to check air conditioning filters. Hardin testified that he saw Reed in the complex around noon on November 1, 1978, wearing a red shirt and blue jeans. Pursley and Flanagan also testified that Reed had worn a red shirt and blue jeans. A fourth eyewitness was Ken Ezelle (“Ezelle”), a maintenance worker for the apartment complex who testified that he saw a man with a red shirt and blue jeans running away from the area of Wadle and Pursley’s apartment, where a woman could be heard screaming. In his defense, Reed presented testimony from his employer and family members to establish that he could not have been in the vicinity of Wadle’s apartment at 12:40 p.m. and that he was not wearing a red shirt and blue jeans on the day in question. Reed also relied on the absence of physical evidence connecting him to the crime.
In March 1979, Reed was convicted and sentenced to death for murdering Wadle in the course of committing robbery and aggravated rape. The trial court granted Reed’s motion for a new trial, and Reed was tried again in 1983. At this second trial, in addition to the aforementioned eyewitnesses, the state produced as a rebuttal witness William McLean, Jr. (“McLean”), a cellmate of Reed in Texas prison who testified that Reed had confessed to him that he had murdered Wadle. In March 1983, Reed was again convicted of capital murder and sentenced to death. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals [(“TCCA”)] affirmed Reed’s conviction and sentence, and the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari. Reed v. State, No. 69,292 (Tex.Crim.App. March 29, 1995)*367 (unpublished), cert. denied,516 U.S. 1050 ,116 S.Ct. 715 ,133 L.Ed.2d 669 (1996). Reed then pursued state post-conviction relief. His state apphcation for a writ of habeas corpus was denied by the Court of Criminal Appeals in September 1998. Ex parte Reed, No. 38,174-01 (Tex.Crim.App. Sept. 16,1998) (unpublished), cert. denied,526 U.S. 1021 ,119 S.Ct. 1259 ,143 L.Ed.2d 355 (1999).
Reed filed his petition for federal ha-beas relief in 1999. The magistrate judge assigned to the case recommended that rehef be denied, and the district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation on February 19, 2003. Reed filed a Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend the judgment. Reed subsequently filed a motion to disqualify the magistrate judge, alleging that the magistrate judge had discussed Reed’s case with a witness. The magistrate judge recused himself, and another magistrate judge was assigned. Reed’s Rule 59(e) motion was then denied. Reed filed his notice of appeal on May 1, 2003. Reed also moved for a transfer of his case to a different district judge, alleging that the district judge to whom his case had been assigned exhibited signs of diminished competency. In September 2003, this court vacated the district court’s orders and remanded the case for reconsideration. Reed v. Dretke, No. 03-10432,2003 WL 24130440 , 2003 U.S.App. LEXIS 27937 (5th Cir. Sept. 15, 2003). The district judge recused himself and a new district judge was assigned to the case. The district court held an evidentiary hearing on Reed’s prosecutorial misconduct claims on February 24, 2005. On July 26, 2005, the district court denied habeas relief on all of Reed’s claims. The district court granted a [certificate of appealabihty (“COA”)] on Reed’s Bat-son claim, and denied a COA as to all other of Reed’s claims.
Reed v. Quarterman,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), a federal court cannot grant habeas relief unless the state court adjudication of that claim either
(1) resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States; or
(2) resulted in a decision that was based on an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the evidence presented in the state court proceeding.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(d); see Wiggins v. Smith,
III. DISCUSSION
Reed argues that the State violated his rights under Batson v. Kentucky,
There are three steps to our Bat-son analysis. First, a defendant must present a prima facie case that the prosecution exercised its peremptory challenges on the basis of race. See id. at 96-97,
A. Batson Hearing
During the jury selection for Reed’s second trial in 1983, Reed objected to the State’s use of peremptory challenges to exclude all five of the eligible African-American potential jurors. The trial judge rejected Reed’s request to have the State explain its reason for striking these jurors. In 1986, the Supreme Court ruled in Bat-son that a state violates a defendant’s rights when the prosecutor discriminates on the basis of race when selecting a jury.
At that hearing, the prosecutors from Reed’s trial testified and offered race-neu
B. Introduction of the Comparative Analysis
1. State procedural bar
On appeal to the TCCA, Reed presented a “comparative analysis” to establish a Batson violation. He analyzed the race-neutral reasons that the State proffered for striking the African-American jurors and asserted that the State accepted many white jurors who had the same characteristics. The TCCA, however, refused to consider Reed’s comparative analysis, ruling that Reed had waived his comparative analysis argument by not raising it at the Batson hearing. Without the benefit of a comparative analysis, the TCCA found that Reed had not sustained his Batson challenge.
After exhausting his state habeas appeals, Reed sought federal habeas corpus relief. The district court also refused to consider Reed’s comparative analysis for his Batson claim. The court reasoned that the TCCA’s decision not to accept Reed’s comparative analysis argument was sound given that the Batson hearing was not contemporaneous with jury selection and that the trial judge expressly put Reed on notice that he had not reviewed the voir dire of any jurors beyond the five African-American jurors who the State had challenged. Therefore, reviewing just the voir dire of the five African-American jurors and the race-neutral explanations the prosecutors proffered at the Batson hearing, the district court concluded that Reed failed to rebut the trial court’s factual findings by clear and convincing evidence. The district court, however, granted Reed a COA on his Batson claim.
Reed characterizes the TCCA’s decision riot to consider his comparative analysis as an inadequate procedural bar which was not firmly established or regularly followed before his case.
The TCCA, however, has not distinguished Young in this manner either before or after Reed’s appeal and instead has consistently relied upon the rule in Young that a defendant may make a comparative analysis argument on appeal even if the defendant did not present that argument to the trial court. No cases after Young, besides Reed, rely on Tompkins to reject the defendant’s comparative analysis. For example, in Vargas v. State,
Reed, an unpublished decision, did not overrule Young, particularly given that the court has consistently applied Young both to capital and noncapital cases after Reed and has considered a comparative analysis argument even when the defendant did not present it to the trial court during a Batson hearing. See, e.g., Watkins v. State,
2. Miller-El
In determining whether the district court erred in refusing to consider Reed’s comparative analysis, it is prudent to consider in-depth a recent Supreme Court case with virtually identical facts. In Mil
Thomas Joe Miller-El’s trial took place in 1986 in Dallas County — the same venue as Reed’s trial. Id. at 235-36,
Miller-El then sought federal habeas relief. The district court rejected Miller-El’s Batson argument without making any mention of a comparative analysis. See Miller-El v. Johnson, No. 3:96-CV-1992-H,
On remand, this court rejected Miller-El’s Batson claim on the merits. Miller-El v. Dretke,
Miller-El’s arguments gave the state court no reason to go leafing through the voir dire transcript. What is more, voir dire at Miller-El’s trial lasted five weeks, and the transcript occupies 11 volumes numbering 4,662 pages. To think that two years after the fact a trial court should dredge up on its own initiative passing references to unseen questionnaires — references buried in a more than 4,600-page transcript no less — is unrealistic. That is why § 2254(d)(2) demands that state courts be taken to task only on the basis of evidence “presented in the State court proceeding.” The 98 questionnaires before the parties, unlike the 10 questionnaires that Miller-El entered into evidence, were not “presented” to the state court.
Id. The majority soundly rejected Justice Thomas’s argument:
The dissent contends that comparisons of black and nonblack venire panelists, along with Miller-El’s arguments about the prosecution’s disparate questioning of black and nonblack panelists and its use of jury shuffles, are not properly before this Court, not having been “put before the Texas courts.” But the dissent conflates the difference between evidence that must be presented to the state courts to be considered by federal courts in habeas proceedings and theories about that evidence. See 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2) (state-court factfinding must be assessed “in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding”); Miller-El [I, 537 U.S.] at 348 [123 S.Ct. 1029 ] (habeas petitioner must show unreasonability “in light of the record before the [state] court”). There can be no question that the transcript of voir dire, recording the evidence on which Miller-El bases his arguments and on which we base our result, was before the state courts, nor does the dissent contend that Miller-El did not “fairly presen[t]” his Batson claim to the state courts.
Id. at 241 n. 2,
In sum, Miller-El II entailed virtually the exact same procedural posture as this case: both Miller-El’s and Reed’s trials occurred before the Court decided Batson. The TCCA remanded both Miller-El’s and Reed’s appeals for Batson hearings. At the Batson hearings, which occurred two years after the voir dire in Miller-El’s trial and ten years after the voir dire in Reed’s trial, neither defendant presented a comparative analysis, and at both hearings the trial court specifically stated that it would read only the voir dire transcript of the black jurors that the State had struck. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court considered the comparative analysis in Miller-El II. The similarities between Miller-El II and this case are striking. In Miller-El II, the Supreme Court, on habeas review, considered the entire voir dire transcript because the comparative analysis simply was a theory that involved the evidence before the state court. Id. The same is true here.
The district court’s attempt to distinguish Miller-El II is unavailing. The district court stated,
Here, in contrast to Miller-El, (1) the full transcript of voir dire was not before the trial court; (2) the State has objected to considering evidence not before the trial court in the Batson hearing ...; (3) the State expressly relies on the 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2) requirement that this Court review state court adjudications “in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding,” ...; and (4) it is clear that at the time of the Batson hearing, the state court judge had no independent recollection of the voir dire, aside from that limited portion that was introduced at the Batson hearing.
None of these distinctions compel a different result from Miller-El II. First, there is no evidence that the entire voir dire transcript was formally presented to the trial court in Miller-El’s Batson hearing. In fact, the trial judge specifically stated, “I’m going to, of course, reread the voir dire of the ten challenged jurors.” Miller-El never suggested that the judge read the entire voir dire transcript, even though the prosecutor pointed out that the defendant had not made a comparative analysis argument. Essentially the same thing happened in Reed’s Batson hearing: the court noted that “[njeither party suggested that the Court review the transcription of the voir dire examination of any other venireman” even after the court stated that it could not remember the jury selection, which had occurred ten years earlier. Therefore, in both cases, the trial court
Second, it is true that the State objected to the TCCA considering the comparative analysis because Reed had not presented it at his Batson hearing, and it does not appear that the State made this same objection in Miller-El’s case. But this is a distinction without a difference. That the State had not objected to the introduction of this evidence was irrelevant to the Supreme Court’s decision to consider Miller-El’s comparative analysis. Instead, the majority determined that the entire voir dire transcript was before the “state courts” (i.e., not just the TCCA) and that the comparative analysis simply was one theory using that evidence. Miller-El II,
The majority’s position in Miller-El II also defeats the district court’s third distinction. Of course, 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(2) requires us to review the state court’s adjudication “in light of the evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” In Miller-El II, the Court determined that the entire voir dire was part of the record, and hence, part of the evidence Miller-El presented, even if the state court did not consider the comparative analysis theory. There is no reason why the same is not true here. We do not violate § 2254(d) by considering a theory that rests upon evidence before the state trial judge, even if the state court chose not to review that evidence or consider that theory. See id.
Finally, the district court noted that the trial judge at Reed’s Batson hearing stated that he had no independent recollection of the jury selection. The judge at Miller-El’s hearing, while suggesting that he did recall some aspects of the voir dire, also stated that he wished to review the record before ruling. The judge expressed his general agreement with the prosecution’s argument but qualified that remark by stating, “I want the same benefit of everything that [the defendant had] talked about and that is to review the records myself.” It is not clear why the fact that Miller-El’s judge remembered some aspects of jury selection and Reed’s judge did not recall any of it should make any difference regarding whether the entire voir dire transcript was before the trial judge. In Miller-El II, the Supreme Court held that the entire voir dire transcript was before the state trial court and that the comparative analysis was one theory that used the evidence. The Court did not hold — as the district court seems to suggest — that the entire voir dire transcript was before the trial judge because the judge could remember some aspects of the voir dire.
In the present case, the district court noted that “Reed’s Batson hearing was long after the trial, and ... Reed’s comparative argument was first made long after, and outside the record of, the Bat-son hearing.” This sentence also could describe Miller-El II: Miller-El’s Batson hearing occurred two years after his trial,
In sum, although the TCCA determined here that it would not consider Reed’s
C. Review of Comparative Analysis
1. Comparative analysis in Miller-El II
Before we discuss Reed’s comparative analysis, we find it useful to recount the Supreme Court’s comparative analysis in Miller-El II. The Court described the relevance of the comparative analysis by noting that “[i]f a prosecutor’s proffered reason for striking a black panelist applies just as well to an otherwise-similar non-black who is permitted to serve, that is evidence tending to prove purposeful discrimination to be considered at Batson’s, third step.” Miller-El II,
The majority responded to the dissent’s assertion that no white panelist was similarly situated to Fields by noting,
None of our cases announces a rule that no comparison is probative unless the situation of the individuals compared is identical in all respects, and there is no reason to accept one.... A per se rule that a defendant cannot win a Batson claim unless there is an exactly identical white juror would leave Batson inopera*376 ble; potential jurors are not products of a set of cookie cutters.
Id. at 247 n. 6,
The other juror that the Court used for its comparative analysis was Joe Warren (“Warren”). Id. at 247,
The Court’s treatment of Miller-El’s comparative analysis also reveals several principles to guide us. First, we do not need to compare jurors that exhibit all of the exact same characteristics. Id. at 247 n. 6,
2. Comparative analysis for Reed’s jury
With respect to the jury selection in Reed’s case, we find that the State’s proffered reasons for striking at least two of the prospective black jurors were pretexts for discrimination. Our conclusion rests on a careful comparison of the testimony of these jurors with that of nonblack jurors who were similarly situated.
a. Gloria Osby
The most obvious example of the implausibility of the State’s justifications for its peremptory challenges, given the entire record, is the State’s strike of prospective African-American juror Gloria Osby (“Osby”). Osby likely would have been an ideal juror for the State. She expressed support for the death penalty and viewed a case of murder in the course of committing robbery or attempted rape as the type of case in which she could vote for death.
The State asserted that it struck Osby for two reasons. First, the State argued that it struck her because she was a health care professional and that the State generally disfavored health care workers in cases involving medical evidence. Second, the State asserted that Osby would require a high standard of proof for the future dangerousness special issue.
Regarding Osby’s status as a health care professional, the State did not ask Osby any questions about her profession. As the Supreme Court stated, the prosecution’s failure to question a potential juror about a characteristic that the State asserts is important is evidence that the asserted reason was actually a pretext for discrimination. See Miller-El II,
The State’s other justification for striking Osby — her alleged requirement that the State show a “strong possibility” of future dangerousness — is also unavailing. The only basis for this contention is one sentence from Osby’s voir dire testimony. In response to a question about whether the State would have to prove that the defendant would commit another murder to show a probability of future dangerousness, Osby stated that “it would have to be proven to me that that is a strong possibility.” (Tr. at 1-235.) She then qualified her statement, agreeing with the prosecu
More tellingly, the State accepted several nonblack jurors who expressed a similar sentiment. White juror William Rhodes (“Rhodes”) stated that to him, the word “probability” in the future dangerousness special issue meant “it’s not for sure but it’s most probable that it would occur again.” (Tr. at 2-834.) When pressed further, he stated, “You couldn’t say it would be a hundred percent proof, but you could say it would be ninety-five percent proof.” (Tr. at 2-835.) There is little difference between this answer and Osby’s statement that she would want to see a “strong possibility” of future dangerousness, but the State sought to keep Rhodes on the jury panel, objecting to the defense’s challenge of Rhodes for cause. White juror Randolph Hanes (“Hanes”) gave an even more unfavorable response for the State regarding the future dangerousness special issue. He stated that in his opinion, “the word probable is too definite. I’m interpreting it as definitely that he would.” (Tr. at 3-185.) He then clarified that he believed “probability” of future dangerousness means “close to being definite.” (Tr. at 3-187.) This would seem to impose a higher burden on the State then showing a “strong possibility,” but the State accepted Hanes. White juror Paul Halliday stated that for the future dangerousness special issue, he would want to see that the defendant’s past behavior indicated that “there is a very, very high degree that he would be a threat to society.” (Tr. at 5-826.) The State accepted him to serve. In sum, Osby’s voir dire testimony, when compared to the testimony of non-black jurors who gave similar responses, demonstrates that the reasons the State came up with to justify its strike of Osby are spurious.
b. Perry Jones
Prospective black juror Perry Jones (“Jones”) also likely would have been a strong juror for the State. He favored the death penalty generally, stating that “[a] lot of cases definitely warrant it.” (Tr. at 1-588.) He believed that the death penalty deterred crime and disagreed with a moratorium on capital punishment. (Tr. at 1-592, 1-593.) He also said that he could impose the death penalty if the facts and circumstances warranted it. (Tr. at 1-591.)
The State asserted, at the Batson hearing, that it struck Jones for three reasons. First, the State claimed that Jones would impose the death penalty only “if the facts are presented to me beyond a shadow of a doubt,” which the State argues is a higher burden of proof than beyond a reasonable doubt. Second, the State argued that Jones would need to see “a little premeditation” to convict for capital murder, which the law in Texas does not require. Finally, the State posited that it struck Jones because he was concerned about losing his job if he was gone from work for a long time. However, a review of Jones’s voir dire testimony, along with a comparison of the State’s treatment of white jurors who expressed these same sentiments, demonstrates that the State’s proffered reasons were pretexts for discrimination.
Jones used the phrase “beyond a shadow of a doubt” in response to a question about his views on the death penalty. The prosecutor asked Jones if he would place himself into one of three categories, the first being a person who believed in the death penalty and could impose it if war
Next, Jones expressed his views on premeditation in response to a question about whether he would want to see premeditation in a capital murder case. (Tr. at 1-640.) Specifically, he stated, “I think that for capital murder that you would have to show a little premeditation.” (Tr. at 1-640.) Jones then clarified his statement, saying that he would not require the State to show that the defendant planned out the act beforehand. (Tr. at 1-641.) Instead, he simply wanted to ensure that the defendant knew what he was doing at the time. (Tr. at 1-641.) Thus, contrary to the State’s argument, it appears that Jones actually would not have held the State to a higher burden; instead, he simply misunderstood the meaning of premeditation, equating it with intent. Further, white juror John Wood also exhibited confusion regarding the meaning of “premeditated murder,” and the State accepted him without probing further to determine what Wood meant by premeditation. (Tr. at 3-284.) This undercuts the State’s argument that a jurors’ views on premeditation were important. See Miller-El II,
Finally, the State cannot justify its strike of Jones based on Jones’s concern about losing his job if he served on the jury. Jones stated that he could not be away from work for a long period of time in January while jury selection was taking place, but he noted that he could return without any problems in February, when
In sum, a careful examination of the record reveals that the State’s asserted reasons for striking prospective black jurors Osby and Jones were mere pretexts for discrimination.
D. Historical Evidence of Discrimination
Much like in Miller-El II, our decision does not rest solely on the comparative analysis. In Miller-El II, the Court stated, “[w]e know that for decades leading up to the time this case was tried prosecutors in the Dallas County office had followed a specific policy of systematically excluding blacks from juries.... ”
Here, Reed presents this same historical evidence of racial bias in the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office. Miller-El’s trial occurred in early 1986. Reed’s trial was in February 1983. One of the same lawyers that conducted the voir dire in Miller-El’s case, Paul Macaluso, also questioned prospective jurors for Reed’s trial. The Court in Miller-El II relied, in part, on the Sparling Manual to glean the history of racial discrimination in the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office, and Reed presented this same document at his Bat-son hearing. The Sparling Manual, written in 1968, directs prosecutors that “[y]ou are not looking for any member of a minority group which may subject him to oppression — they almost always empathize with the accused” and that “[mjinority races almost always empathize with the Defendant.” Thus, this document demonstrates that the District Attorney’s Office had a policy of striking African-Americans from the jury. Id. at 264,
In sum, the facts of Miller-El II and the facts here are almost identical. In both cases, the prosecution used its peremptory challenges to strike prospective black jurors. In both cases, the State had accepted several white jurors who exhibited the exact same characteristics as these black jurors. In both cases, the comparative analysis demonstrated that the State’s post hoc rationalizations for challenging these jurors were in reality pretexts for discrimination. And in both cases, which occurred within three years of each other and involved one of the same prosecutors, a policy of excluding African-Americans from juries pervaded the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office. Given the similarities, and adhering to the lessons from Miller-El II, we conclude that Reed has established a Batson violation. The state court’s conclusion to the contrary was an unreasonable determination of the facts before it. Accordingly, Reed is entitled to habeas relief on his Batson claim.
IV. CONCLUSION
Reed has established that he is entitled to habeas corpus relief based on the Bat-son error in selecting his jury. Therefore, we need not reach the other three issues on which we originally granted COAs. Although we do not relish adding a new chapter to this unfortunate story more than thirty years after the crime took place, we conclude that the Constitution affords Reed a right to relief. Therefore, we REVERSE and REMAND with instructions to grant the writ, set aside Reed’s conviction and sentence, and order Reed’s release from custody unless the State grants Reed a new trial within 120 days from the date of the district court’s order.
Notes
. Although “a trial court’s ruling on the issue of discriminatory intent must be sustained unless it is clearly erroneous,” Snyder v. Louisiana, - U.S. -,
. Specifically, Reed argues that the district court should have reviewed his Batson argument de novo because the TCCA’s decision was not "on the merits,” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), thereby making the AEDPA inapplicable. That is, Reed asserts that the TCCA's decision not to consider the comparative analysis amounted to a new “procedural bar” to his Batson claim that the state court had not firmly established or regularly followed, which would require us to review his claim de novo. See, e.g., Rosales v. Dretke,
. Macaluso also oversaw the voir dire for Reed’s trial and testified at Reed's Batson hearing.
. Recently, the majority of Justices again rejected this same argument from Justice Thom
. There is no support for the district court's conclusion that a two-year delay versus a ten-year delay in having a Batson hearing makes any difference in this analysis.
. The Supreme Court in Miller-El II distinguished between the voir dire, which was before the TCCA as part of the evidence, and the juror questionnaires and information cards, which might not have been before the state courts.
. Reed asked several questions about Osby's profession, learning that she studied nursing at El Centro Junior College and that she worked in the respiratory ward. (Tr. at 1-274.)
. The State did question one black potential juror, Mary Mosley ("Mosley”), on this subject, and she testified that she had previously worked in an emergency room where a patient was on a respirator. (Tr. at 6-478.) The court ultimately struck Mosley for cause for an unrelated reason.
.Further, although irrelevant to our decision, see supra note 6, we note parenthetically that the State accepted several nonblack jurors who indicated on their juror questionnaires that the juror or a relative of the juror had worked in a hospital.
. Rhodes and Jones shared two of the characteristics that the State relies upon to justify its strike of Jones — the use of the phrase "shadow of a doubt" and concerns about work — but the State accepted Rhodes and used a peremptory challenge against Jones.
. Although Reed does not raise this argument, we also note that, much like in Miller-El II, the prosecution here gave a "graphic description" of the death penalty to a majority of prospective black jurors and a minority of prospective white jurors. See Miller-El II,
. In Miller-El II, the Court focused on the comparative analysis of two jurors that the State struck, even though the State used peremptory challenges for ten prospective black jurors. Miller-El II,
For example, the State asserted that it struck Gaut in part because she would not vote "yes” on the future dangerousness special issue without hearing the testimony of a psychiatrist, but a review of the entire voir dire transcript reveals that she never actually expressed this view, instead simply stating a preference for psychiatric evidence. (Tr. at 5-127, 5-132.) The State accepted several white jurors who also expressed a preference for psychiatric testimony. (Tr. at 2-564 (Juror Lisa Hill); Tr. at 3-971 (Juror William Scanlon).) The State claims that it also struck Gaut because she was unable to understand the special issue questions, but it accepted several white jurors who expressed the same level of confusion. (Tr. at 5-347 (Juror Robert Jennings); Tr. at 4-437 (Juror David Taylor); Tr. at 5-710 (Juror Paul Wendt).)
Similarly, the State claims that it struck Johnson in part because she would refuse to impose the minimum penalty for murder and had prior experience with the criminal justice system, having been acquitted of a misdemeanor assault. But several white jurors that the State accepted expressed similar views regarding the minimum penalty for murder (Tr. at 5-598, 5-613 (Juror J.L. Epps); Tr. at 5-219, 5-221 (Juror Paul Powell)), and the State accepted white juror Robert Jennings even though he was serving a deferred adjudication for carrying a prohibited weapon (Tr. at 5-321.).
Finally, the State’s strike of Curtis Alberty ("Alberty”) does not assist Reed’s Batson argument. Alberty stated that he was opposed to the death penalty and that he did not want to be the one deciding whether a person lived or died. (Tr. at 4-223, 4-226.) He said that his opposition to the death penalty was part of his conscience. (Tr. at 4-239.) Although he agreed that he would answer the three special issue questions "yes” if the evidence so warranted, he stated that the result would still bother him. (Tr. at 4-254.) Reed does not point to any nonblack juror that the State accepted who expressed this same sentiment. As stated above, however, this fact does not defeat Reed’s Batson claim. In Mtller-El II, the Court found a Batson violation based on its analysis of only two of ten black jurors who the State struck. Miller-El II,
