Defendant, Graylon Herron, appeals from a conviction, after a jury trial, of illegal possession of a Schedule II controlled substance, Phencyclidine. Defendant was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment; execution of the sentence was suspended and he was placed on probation for five years. We remand.
Because defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, we briefly
The record discloses that there were eight black members of the thirty-six member jury panel. After the court accepted each party’s challenges for cause, the prosecutor used five of his six peremptory challenges to strike the five remaining black venirepersons. Defense counsel challenged the prosecutor’s peremptory strikes on the grounds of purposeful discrimination pursuant to Batson v. Kentucky,
Defendant claims the trial court erred: (1) by giving an erroneous instruction, and (2) by overruling defendant’s motion to strike the jury panel.
We first address defendant’s claim that the trial court erred by overruling defendant’s motion to strike the jury panel after the State used five peremptory challenges to remove all remaining black venireper-sons from the jury panel. Defendant argues that the State’s action created a prima facie showing of racial discrimination which the prosecutor did not rebut with race neutral, case specific and legitimate explanations.
It has been the law of the land for more than a century that purposeful racial discrimination in selection of jurors violates a defendant’s right to equal protection. Strauder v. West Virginia,
State v. Antwine,
The prosecutor in this case used his peremptory challenges to eliminate all blacks from the jury panel. In particular we note that venirepersons 7 and 426, who are black, were stricken because the State did not feel that they responded adequately to the questions asked them. The general questions of the State to the prospective
We would also point out that venire-person number 433 was stricken because he said he had been arrested for possession of a gun. However, a white venireperson, number 116, was left on the jury even though he stated he had been arrested for theft. Whether similarly situated white venirepersons escáped the State’s challenges is one of the objective criteria for the court to consider in determining if the state engaged in purposeful discrimination. Antwine, at 65.
Batson is not satisfied by neutral explanations which are no more than facially legitimate, reasonably specific and clear. Antwine, at 65. The Supreme Court did not intend a charade when it announced Batson. Id. It is incumbent on the trial judge to carefully consider many factors and to “assess the entire milieu of the voir dire objectively and subjectively.” Id. at 65.
On appeal, we give great deference to the trial court’s findings of fact which will not be set aside unless clearly erroneous. Antwine, at 66.
In this case the trial court made no findings with regard to the Batson issue. Rather, the court simply denied defendant’s motion to quash the jury panel without further clarification. In light of the decision in Antwine, trial courts are expected to provide findings of fact or detailed explanations on the record of the basis for their determination as to whether or not the prosecutor engaged in purposeful discrimination in the selection of the jury panel. State v. Michael Hood,
Accordingly, we remand this case for further findings as required by Antwine. In view of our holding we decline to address, at this time, defendant’s claim of instructional error.
Notes
. In Hood, this court gratuitously undertook an analysis of the record where the trial court had failed to make findings. In Hood, unlike the case sub judice, there were readily discernible reasons in the record for the prosecutor’s peremptory challenges of blacks and an absence of a record by defendant that repudiated the legitimacy of those reasons.
