In this federal habeas corpus case, the petitioner claims that he was the victim of racial discrimination in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, in the selection of the Louisiana grand jury that indicted him for murder.
I.
The petitioner, Wilbert Rideau, was indicted on March 1, 1961, for the capital murder of Julia Ferguson, a bank employee, on February 16, 1961, in Calcasieu Parish, Louisiana. After his armed robbery of a bank in the city of Lake Charles, Rideau forced the victim and two other bank employees to accompany him in the victim’s car to an uninhabited area outside the city. There he shot the three bank employees and stabbed the victim to death. The other two bank employees survived.
State v. Rideau,
Rideau was arrested on the evening of February 16, 1961, and confined in the Calcasieu Parish jail in Lake Charles. On the night of his arrest he made detailed oral and 'written confessions to the crimes. The next morning a sound film was made of Rideau, in the custody of state police officers, personally confessing to the crime in answer to leading questions by the Sheriff of Calcasieu Parish. The film was broadcast on the Lake Charles television station KPLC-TV on February 17, 18, and 19, 1961.
Rideau v. Louisiana,
After his motion for a change of venue was denied, Rideau was convicted of capital murder, La. R.S. § 14:30, by a jury and sentenced to death in the Fourteenth Judicial District Court, Parish of Calcasieu. On direct appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court, the conviction and sentence were affirmed. Rideau I.
The United States Supreme Court granted certiorari and reversed Rideau’s conviction and sentence.
Rideau v. Louisiana,
Upon remand of the case to the state Fourteenth Judicial District Court in Cal-casieu Parish, the district attorney moved the trial court to order Rideau to show cause why a change of venue should not be made to a Parish outside the range of
*476
KPLC-TV in Lake Charles. Rideau joined in the motion. The state district court denied the motion, but the Louisiana Supreme Court reversed, granted the motion, and ordered the trial judge to grant a change of venue.
State v. Rideau,
Venue was changed to the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge. Prior to trial Rideau, who is an African-American, moved to quash his 1961 indictment by the Calcasieu Parish grand jury on the ground that there had been a systematic exclusion, through a token inclusion, of black jurors from the grand jury. After an evidentiary hearing, his motion was denied. Rideau was convicted by a jury of capital murder in East Baton Rouge Parish, La. R.S. § 14:30, and sentenced to death. The Louisiana Supreme Court affirmed the conviction and sentence.
State v. Rideau,
In 1967, Rideau petitioned the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana for a writ of habeas corpus. Among numerous grounds, Ri-deau urged the issue of racial discrimination in the formation of the grand jury. However, all those issues were pretermit-ted when the State conceded that reversal of Rideau’s conviction and sentence was required by the recent decision of
Wither-spoon v. Illinois,
Prior to his retrial, Rideau again moved the Nineteenth Judicial District Court in East Baton Rouge Parish to quash his 1961 indictment by the Calcasieu Parish grand jury because of racial discrimination in selection of jury venires and their failure to represent a cross-section of the community. After an evidentiary hearing, Rideau’s motions were denied. Rideau was convicted by an East Baton Rouge Parish jury of capital murder and sentenced to death.
On appeal to the Louisiana Supreme Court, Rideau argued numerous bills of exception, including an objection to the district court’s denial of his motion to quash his indictment. The court rejected all of Rideau’s bills as being without merit and affirmed his conviction.
State v. Rideau,
Rideau filed this petition for federal ha-beas corpus on July 27, 1994, 2 alleging that *477 his indictment and conviction were unlawfully obtained by an unconstitutionally impaneled grand jury. The State moved for dismissal of Rideau’s petition as untimely under Rule 9(a) of the rules governing habeas corpus procedure. A federal magistrate judge recommended that the federal district court deny the State’s dismissal motion and grant Rideau’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. After an evidentia-ry hearing, however, the federal district court denied Rideau’s petition and granted the State’s Rule 9(a) motion. The court concluded that Rideau had not proved that his “totally unreasonable” delay had not prejudiced the State’s interests. Alternatively, the court denied Rideau’s petition on its merits for failure to rebut with clear and convincing evidence the presumption that the state court’s decisions were correct. Rideau appealed.
II.
First, we must decide whether the district court correctly dismissed Rideau’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus as untimely under Rule 9(a) of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases (“Section 2254 Rules”). Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts, R. 9(a), 28 U.S.C. foil. § 2254. 3
A.
Rule 9(a) of the Section 2254 Rules allows for the dismissal of habeas petitions that are filed in a delayed manner under limited circumstances:
A petition may be dismissed if it appears that the state of which the respondent is an officer has been prejudiced in its ability to respond to the petition by delay in its filing unless the petitioner shows that it is based on grounds of which he could not have had knowledge by the exercise of reasonable diligence before the circumstances prejudicial to the state occurred.
28 U.S.C. foil. § 2254 (2000). 4
The State bears a heavy burden under Rule 9(a) to “(1) make a particularized showing of prejudice, (2) show that the prejudice was caused by the petitioner having filed a late petition, and (3) show that the petitioner has not acted with reasonable diligence as a matter of law.”
Walters v. Scott,
“[LJapses of time that affect the state’s ability, but that do not make it ‘virtually impossible’ for the state to respond, [do not] require dismissal.” 2 James S. Liebman
&
Randy Hertz, Federal Habeas Corpus Practice and Prooedure § 24.3 at 928-29 (3d ed.1998) (citing, inter alia,
Baxter v. Estelle,
If the State makes its prima facie showing of prejudice, then the burden shifts to the petitioner, who must show either (1) that the State’s showing of prejudice is false, or (2) that the delay resulted from grounds that the petitioner could not have known of through reasonable diligence prior to the occurrence of the prejudicial circumstances.
Walters,
Rule 9(a) codifies the application of the equitable doctrine of laches to habeas corpus petitions.
Walters,
B.
Rideau’s habeas claim, asserting that the Calcasieu Parish grand jury that indicted him was unconstitutionally formed through racially discriminatory selection procedures, is based primarily on the transcripts of the two pretrial evidentiary hearings held in the East Baton Parish state court on his motions to quash the Calcasieu Parish grand jury indictment and grand jury bodies. The transcript of the first hearing on November 5, 1964, was introduced as evidence in the second hearing on December 15, 1969. Both have been made part of the record of this appeal.
Acton Hillebrandt was elected Clerk of Court of Calcasieu Parish in 1948 and, as such, served as an ex-officio member of its jury commission. As he was still in office during both evidentiary hearings, he was called at each proceeding to testify as to the jury commission’s procedures used to select the Calcasieu jury bodies. At the first evidentiary hearing, Mr. Hillebrandt testified that he had attended every meeting of the jury commission except possibly one since 1948. He testified that the commission obtained the names, race, and other data regarding prospective jurors from the parish registrar of voters and other sources. The commission prepared an identification card for each potential venire person showing his or her race and other information. During his testimony, Mr. Hillebrandt examined one of the identification cards and affirmed that it indicated the race of the venire member. The commission, consisting of Mr. Hillebrandt and five other commissioners appointed by the court, all of whom were white men, met together and selected the names from the cards to make up a general venire list of 300 people. The commission selected twenty people from the general venire to form the grand jury venire. They “piek[ed] any name that they thought would be a good grand juror ... levelheaded.” They did not select the jurors by lot or randomly. Mr. Hillebrandt testified that, as a rule, he selected people based on their occupations or his personal knowledge of them. He stated that he made it a point to put a “member of the colored race” on every grand jury that he drew. He testified that, because a conviction had been reversed “many years before” Rideau’s grand jury was selected, the commissioners “all knew that they might as well be sure there was some Negroes in the panel[.]” On the other hand, Mr. Hil-lebrandt testified that a person’s race would not qualify or disqualify him from serving on either the grand or general jury venire. In response to a question by the State’s attorney, Mr. Hillebrandt agreed that the practice and procedure that the commission followed in connection with the grand jury venire in Rideau’s case was “one of long standing and of long vintage.” He added that, when the grand jury venire was selected, “we had no idea what would come before it, Rideau or who.” Mr. Hil-lebrandt also testified that grand jury foremen were selected from the grand jury *480 venire by the presiding judge, and that to his knowledge no member of the “colored race” had ever served as foreman. He stated that, from the names of the venire members on the grand jury venire list, he could tell that at least one of the twenty venire persons in Rideau’s case was black and that sixteen were white. Rideau’s attorney subsequently introduced the jury commission’s identification cards for the three remaining grand jury venire members, indicating that those three venire members were white, along with an affidavit by Mr. Hillebrandt verifying the authenticity of the cards and explaining the racial coding contained on them.
In addition, Rideau introduced as evidence two of the identification cards used by the commission in drawing general and grand jury venires, showing how the cards indicated each potential venire member’s race with either a “W” or an “N”; the 1960 U.S. Census results for Calcasieu Parish indicating that 18.5% of the Parish’s male population over the age of 21 was African-American; and an affidavit by the Calca-sieu Parish Registrar of Voters providing a breakdown of registered voters by race, showing that approximately 16% of the registered voters were African-Americans.
At the second evidentiary hearing, Mr. Hillebrandt gave a similar description of the jury commission’s procedures. He admitted that neither he nor any other commissioner, to his knowledge, had ever made a conscious effort to discover or solicit potential jurors from the black community. Mr. Hillebrandt testified that, after the 300 general venire members were selected, their identification cards were placed in a metal container, and names were drawn therefrom to select the twenty-person grand jury venire. Mr. Hille-brandt testified that “usually you couldn’t help but be” conscious of the race of the .individuals in selecting the grand jury ve-nire because the cards bore either a “W” or an “N” to denote race. Rideau also introduced as evidence four of the original twenty race-coded cards from which the jury venire was selected, the 1960 Census information, the voter registrar’s affidavit, and the transcript of the 1964 evidentiary hearing.
In overruling Rideau’s motion to quash after each hearing, the state trial court assigned differing reasons. After the first hearing, the court concluded that the commissioners properly took into account the race of potential venire persons to determine whether they were of good character and standing; that the commission’s access to this information was not improper because there was no showing of purposeful exclusion or inclusion on the basis of race; and that the commissioners had no duty to go out and investigate 300 people. After the second hearing the court overruled the motion to quash because “the authority to that by which I am bound, whether I agree or disagree, is the Banks case wherein the Supreme Court had before it these same principles.” 5
In appealing his third conviction to the Louisiana Supreme Court, Rideau again argued, among numerous other issues, that the trial court committed reversible error in denying his motion to quash the Calca-sieu Parish grand jury bodies and indictment because of racial discrimination in the bodies’ composition. In rejecting this argument, the Louisiana Supreme Court stated:
*481 The majority of the contentions raised by defense counsel in this bill of exceptions were presented on appeal and considered by us in [Rideau 12]. In deciding adversely to defendant, we stated:
Fairness in the formation of the jury bodies is a fundamental requirement, long recognized by this Court.... Both the state and federal constitutions require that jury bodies be selected without discrimination because of race. A planned limitation of the number of negroes selected to serve on the grand jury imposed on the basis of race is prohibited....
The question of whether racial or other discrimination has been practiced in the formation of the jury bodies is one of fact.... The burden of establishing such discrimination rests upon the defendant....
The Jury Commission of Calcasieu Parish selected the list of Grand Jurors on January 5, 1961, before the commission of the crime charged. Clearly, therefore, no action of the jury officials could have been designed to prejudice the defendant.
Out of an abundance of caution, we have studied this bill and find that defendant has not shown that he suffered any prejudice from the venire selection in Calcasieu Parish.... Purposeful discrimination may not be assumed or merely asserted, it must be proved. A defendant who claims discrimination has the burden of establishing that such was the fact. The mere establishment of disparity between the number of Negroes on a venire list and the number of whites does not make a prima facie case of discrimination which must stand where not rebutted by the State.
State v. Rideau,
The federal habeas district court, in granting the Rule 9(a) dismissal, held that the State had made a “particularized” showing of prejudice by alleging that the venire identification card exhibits were missing and that Mr. Hillebrandt, the other jury commissioners, and the presiding judges were unavailable as witnesses. After citing these factors, the court stated:
The big issue is whether or not the court believes that the defendants, the state of Louisiana, has made a particularized showing of prejudice. And I think they have. I think to have someone wait as long as Mr. Rideau has waited, and we are now approaching the year 2000, and this crime occurred in 1961, with the final judgment in this case being in 1973, the court finds that this is a totally unreasonable time as a matter of law for the defendant to wait to raise this issue!.]
Hence, the federal district court did not make specific findings as to the particular ways in which the State had been prejudiced in its ability to respond to the petition by the unavailability of the witnesses or the venire identification card exhibits.
C.
It is apparent that the State failed to meet its heavy burden of (1) making a particularized showing that it has been prejudiced in its ability to respond to the petition; or, (2) assuming arguendo that prejudice exists, showing that that preju *482 dice was caused by Rideau’s having filed a delayed petition. Therefore, we need not reach (3) the issue of whether the petitioner has not acted with reasonable diligence as a matter of law.
(1)
The State claims that it has been prejudiced in its ability to respond to the petition because Acton Hillebrandt, the other members of the jury commission, and the two state trial judges are either too elderly to recall specific details, deceased, or are at unknown locations. To meet its burden of making a particularized showing of prejudice, however, the State may not merely allege prejudicial facts, but must offer concrete proof of the allegations.
Wise,
The State alleged but did not present concrete proof that Mr. Hillebrandt was physically or mentally unable to testify regarding the Calcasieu Parish grand jury selection procedures. Further, the State has not alleged the factual substance of such testimony by Mr. Hillebrandt or even alleged that it would differ from the transcripts of his testimony at the two state court evidentiary hearings.
See Walters,
At the evidentiary hearing in the federal district court in the present case, the parties stipulated that four of the jury commissioners and one of the state court judges were deceased as of January 1999. However, the State has not alleged or proved with concrete evidence the date upon which each of the witnesses died or became unavailable, the date upon which Rideau’s delay became unreasonable, or the substance of each witness’s testimony that has been lost during the specific period of Rideau’s allegedly unreasonable delay.
See, e.g., McDonnell,
The State also argues that it has been prejudiced by the disappearance from the state trial records of the race-coded identification cards and other documentary exhibits. However, the State does not make any particularized showing of prejudice from this disappearance. Furthermore, Mr. Hillebrandt described the identification cards fully in his testimony at the two state evidentiary hearings, and the transcripts of that testimony have been fully
*483
preserved, making the availability of the cards themselves unnecessary in these proceedings.
See Walters,
(2)
Assuming arguendo that the death, disability, or unavailability of each witness is construed as prejudicial to the State, the State bears the further burden of proving that Rideau’s delay in filing his habeas petition caused all sources of the evidence each could have provided to be lost. At a minimum, this requires the State to establish that if Rideau had filed his habeas petition at a specific earlier time, the evidence the State claims to have lost would have been available and material. The witnesses may have died or become unavailable before or shortly after Rideau’s conviction and sentence became final in the Louisiana Supreme Court. In that case, the loss of the witnesses’ testimony certainly would not be attributable to Ri-deau’s delay in bringing his habeas petition. Moreover, the State apparently failed to take advantage of opportunities during the two state evidentiary hearings to present the testimony of the jury commissioners it now claims are deceased or unavailable. The State has not alleged or proved any facts to show that the loss of those witnesses is not attributable to its own lack of diligence. We simply do not have the necessary facts before us. The State has the burden to prove those facts; the absence of their proof compels the conclusion that the necessary foundation for a Rule 9(a) dismissal has not been laid.
See Walters,
(3)
Because we hold that the State has failed to make a sufficient showing of prejudice in its ability to respond to the petition that was caused by the petitioner’s delay, it is unnecessary for us to determine whether Rideau’s delay in filing his petition was unreasonable.
Walters,
III.
Because the State failed to carry its burden under Rule 9(a), we turn to a review of the decisions of the state courts and the federal district court on the merits of Rideau’s petition for habeas corpus. In a federal habeas corpus proceeding, we review the district court’s legal determinations de novo.
Johnson v. Puckett,
In the present case, the State did not introduce any evidence in either the federal or the state courts to rebut the evidence taken in the state trial court hearings on Rideau’s motions to quash the Calcasieu Parish grand jury indictment. As a consequence, the federal district court and the state courts were not required to make any purely factual determinations that we are called upon to review. Rather, we review their decisions only for error in rulings of law or mixed rulings of fact and law.
A.
For well over a century, the Supreme Court has held that a criminal conviction of an African-American cannot stand under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment if it is based on an indictment of a grand jury from which African-Americans were excluded on the basis of race.
See Rose v. Mitchell,
A criminal defendant “is entitled to require that the State not deliberately and systematically deny to members of his race the right to participate as jurors in the administration of justice.”
Alexander,
These holdings make clear that claims of discrimination in the selection of members of the grand jury are cognizable on federal habeas corpus, and will support issuance of a writ setting aside a state conviction and ordering the indictment quashed.
Rose,
The first step is to establish that the group is one that is a recognizable, distinct class, singled out for different treatment under the laws, as written or as applied. Next, the degree of under-representation must be proved, by comparing the proportion of the group in the total population to the proportion called to serve as grand jurors, over a significant period of time. This method of proof, sometimes called the “rule of exclusion,” has been held to be available as a method of proving discrimination in jury selection against a delineated class. Finally, ... a selection procedure that is susceptible of abuse or is not racially neutral supports the presumption of discrimination raised by the statistical showing. Once the defendant has shown substantial underrepresentation of his group, he has made out a prima facie case of discriminatory purpose, and the burden then shifts to the State to rebut that case.
Id.
at 494-95,
The petitioner may also prove a prima facie case without showing a statistical disparity “over a significant period of time”; he may satisfy his prima facie burden by showing a disparity in the particular grand jury body that indicted him, coupled with proof either that (1) the selection process was itself not racially neutral and presented an opportunity for discrimination, or that (2) the jury commissioners had made no attempt to acquaint themselves with eligible members of the African-American community.
Id.
at 493-94,
Because racial discrimination in the grand jury selection process “strikes at the fundamental values of our judicial system and our society as a whole,” it is well-established that a criminal defendant has suffered an equal protection violation when he is indicted by a grand jury that is the product of such a discriminatory process.
Rose,
[N]o state is at liberty to impose upon one charged with crime a discrimination in its trial procedure which the Constitution, and an Act of Congress passed pursuant to the Constitution, alike forbid. Nor is this Court at liberty to grant or withhold the benefits of equal protection, which the Constitution commands for all, merely as we may deem the defendant innocent or guilty. It is the state’s function, not ours, to assess the evidence against a defendant. But it is our duty as well as the state’s to see to it that throughout the procedure for bringing him to justice he shall enjoy the protection which the Constitution guarantees. Where, as in this case, timely objection has laid bare a discrimination in the selection of grand jurors, the conviction cannot stand, because the Constitution prohibits the procedure by which it was obtained. Equal protection of the laws is something more than an abstract right. It is a command which the state must respect, the benefits of which every person may demand. Not the least merit of our constitutional system is that its safeguards extend to all-the least deserving as well as the most virtuous.
Hill,
B.
The ultimate question in the present case, whether the grand jury was selected in a systematically unrepresentative or racially discriminatory manner, has long been recognized to be a question of law or a mixed question of fact and law.
See, e.g., Rose,
Rideau, as an African-American, is a member of a distinct, cognizable class that has been singled out for discrimination.
Rose,
has never announced mathematical standards for the demonstration of “systematic exclusion of blacks but has, rather, emphasized that a factual inquiry is necessary in each case that takes into account all possible explanatory factors.” The progressive decimation of potential Negro grand jurors is indeed striking here, but we do not rest our conclusion that petitioner has demonstrated a pri-ma facie case of invidious racial discrimination on statistical improbability alone, for the selection procedures themselves were not racially neutral.
Alexander,
Also, it is evident that the degree of underrepresentation of African-Americans on the general and grand jury venires had prevailed over a significant period of time. According to Mr. Hillebrandt, who had attended virtually all of the meetings of the jury commission since his election in 1948, the commission’s venire selection practices and procedures were of long standing and long vintage in Calcasieu Parish. Many years before 1961, Mr. Hil-lebrandt testified, after a jury conviction had been reversed, he began the practice of making sure that there was at least one “colored person” on each grand jury veni-re. 9 This practice, however, he clearly indicated, was merely a token inclusion of African-Americans and was by no means intended to rectify their underrepresentation.
Rideau introduced additional census and venire composition evidence in the proceedings before the Magistrate Judge that fully corroborates the Calcasieu Parish jury commission’s long-lived pattern of discrimination against African-Americans in the selection of general and grand jury venires. As the Magistrate Judge’s report correctly found:
The statistical evidence of under-representation is overwhelming and unre-butted. According to the 1960 U.S. Census, Calcasieu Parish had 7,237 *488 black men over the age of 21, and 31,729 white men in the same category. Thus, about 18.5 percent of the parish’s population was black and eligible for grand jury service in 1960 and 1961. According to the 1950 U.S. Census, Calcasieu Parish had 26,172 men over the age of 21. Of that number, 5,626 were black-about 21.5 percent of the eligible population.
According to undisputed evidence of the 12 grand juries that were selected between October 3, 1954 and January 16, 1961, no grand jury had more than one black member (out of 12 on each panel). Of 144 grand jurors that were selected during this period, only six were black-about four percent.
F.H.P., at 190-91 (footnote omitted). Consequently, under either standard, disproportionate underrepresentation over a significant period of time, or disproportionate underrepresentation of African-Americans in Rideau’s own grand jury venire coupled with a racially non-neutral selection process and the failure of the jury commissioners to acquaint themselves with a representative number of African-Americans eligible for jury service, we conclude that Rideau proved a prima facie case of unconstitutional grand jury venire selection and composition.
A telling sign that the prevalent statistical underrepresentation of minorities on the grand jury venires resulted from racial discrimination was the commission’s venire selection procedure', which was “susceptible of abuse or [was] not racially neutral.”
Castaneda,
That Mr. Hillebrandt testified that he did not intentionally seek to discriminate against prospective grand jurors by using cards bearing racial identifications, and that he did not know whether the other jury commissioners did so, does not dissipate a prima facie case established under the Court’s decisions.
Norris v. Alabama,
As in Whitus v. Georgia, supra, the clerk of court, who was also a member of the jury commission, testified that no consideration was given to race during the selection procedure. The Court has squarely held, however, that affirmations of good faith in making individual selections are insufficient to dispel a pri-ma facie case of systematic exclusion .... The result bespeaks discrimination, whether or not it was a conscious decision on the part of any individual jury commissioner.
Alexander,
Consequently, we conclude that Rideau established a prima facie case of racial discrimination in the process used to select the grand jury that indicted him. The State produced no evidence to rebut any portion of Rideau’s prima facie case in either the two state evidentiary hearings or the federal district court proceedings. The only evidence the State can point to is Mr. Hillebrandt’s testimony that neither he nor any other commissioner to his knowledge used the race-coded identification cards to intentionally exclude African-Americans from grand jury venires. As we have noted, however, such disclaimers are insufficient to rebut a prima facie showing of discrimination. The State must “show[ ] that permissible racially neutral selection criteria and procedures have produced the monochromatic result,” and it has made no strides in making such a showing, either here or in the state courts.
Alexander,
Accordingly, Rideau’s conviction must be reversed and his unconstitutionally obtained indictment quashed.
Vasquez,
[I]ntentional discrimination in the selection of grand jurors is a grave constitutional trespass, possible only under color of state authority, and wholly within the power of the State to prevent. Thus, the remedy we have embraced for over a century-the only effective remedy for this violation-is not disproportionate to the evil that it seeks to deter. If grand jury discrimination becomes a thing of the past, no conviction will ever again be lost on account of it.
Id.
at 262,
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE and REMAND to the district court with instructions to issue the writ of habeas corpus unless, within a reasonable time to be designated by the district court, *490 the State should again indict and try Ri-deau.
Notes
. To distinguish between the records in the trials and proceedings involved in this appeal, we cite the records in the state jury trials and the federal habeas proceedings as follows: first, second, and third state jury trial records as "S.J.T. I, II, and III”; the federal district court’s habeas proceeding record on the instant petition as "F.H.P.” A copy of the federal district court's grant of habeas relief in 1969 is filed in S.J.T. Ill, at 16-17.
. Because Rideau’s petition was filed before the April 26, 1996, effective date of the Anti-
*477
terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), its provisions amending the habeas corpus statute do not apply here.
Lindh v. Murphy,
. We review the grant of a Rule 9(a) dismissal under the same standard of review we employ for the grant of summary judgment.
McDonnell
v.
Estelle,
. In its original form as proposed by the Supreme Court, the rule would have included a provision creating a presumption that the Stale was prejudiced by delays of more than five years. However, the House Judiciary Committee struck that provision from the rule passed by Congress, stating that “it is unsound policy to require the defendant to overcome a presumption of prejudice.” H.R.Rep. No. 1471, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 5,
reprinted in
1976 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2478, 2481;
see also Wise
v.
Armontrout,
. We have been unable to find the
"Banks
case,” upon which the state trial court relied without citation. It is possible that the court was referring to the similarly named relevant case of
Eubanks v. Louisiana,
.
But see id.
at 107-08 (Barham, J. dissenting) ("It cannot be seriously contended that this defendant failed to make out a prima facie case of purposeful racial discrimination in the selection of the grand jury venire. He has established that only 5 per cent of the grand jury venire was black, while the population of Calcasieu Parish 21 years or older was 25 per cent black. That grand jury venire was selected, not at random, but with the commissioners' full knowledge of the race of each person selected. But here, as in
Alexander,
it is not necessary that we 'rest our conclusion that petitioner has demonstrated a prima fa-cie case of invidious racial discrimination on statistical improbability alone, for the selection procedures themselves were not racially neutral.' " (citing
Alexander v. Louisiana,
. Although we do not decide the issue of the reasonableness of Rideau’s delay, the author of this opinion certifies that his careful examination of the record reveals no evidence that supports the State’s assertion of purposeful delay for tactical advantage by the petitioner.
.
Cf. Johnson,
. As the Magistrate Judge’s report in these proceedings observes, "It is difficult, if not impossible, to interpret this statement, when read in context with the other facts, as anything other than an admission that jury commissioners were trying to get away with putting as few blacks on grand juries as they thought they could.”
