MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This habeas action was initiated by the petitioner
pro se
on January 17, 1984. On October 17, 1984, my former colleague, Judge McMillen, granted the respondents’ motion for summary judgment on two of the petitioner’s claims for relief but reserved ruling on the question whether petitioner was denied his right to a fair and impartial jury by the State’s use of peremptory challenges.
United States ex rel. Miller v. O’Leary,
No. 84 C 348 (N.D.Ill. Oct. 17, 1984). The court appointed counsel to conduct a “searching inquiry” into the mattеr.
Id.
slip op. at 2. After the judge’s retirement earlier this year, the case was reassigned to me. On March 3, 1986, I indicated to the parties that I would not rule on the petitioner’s remaining claim until the Supreme Court rendered its decision in
Batson v. Kentucky,
which was then pending.
FACTS
The respondents have neither submitted a statement of material, nondisputed facts in support of their motion for summary judgment nor offered this court a “statement of genuine issues” in opposition to petitioner’s motion for summary judgment. Accordingly, the facts alleged in petition *176 er’s “statement of material facts” are deemed admitted by the respondents and accepted as true by this court. See N.D. Ill.R. 12(e) and 12(f). The following is a brief summary of those facts.
1. The State Court Proceedings
Following a trial by jury, thе petitioner was convicted of murdering William Sta-ray, a white male found dead in the front seat of a Corvette on the south side of Chicago. Petitioner was also charged with and convicted of attempted armed robbery and armed violence predicated on the robbery. He was sentenced to 35 years on the murder count, 30 years on the armed violence count, and 15 years on the attempted robbery count. 2
The venire producing the jury that convicted petitioner originally consisted of 69 jurors, of whom seventeen were black and the remaining were white. Because of the seriousness of the charges, both sides were allowed twenty peremptory challenges. The State used fourteen of its challenges to strike blacks from the pool of potential jurors; it used two other challenges to strike whites. Since three blacks had been removed for cause by the trial court, the result was an all-white jury. The two alternate jurors were also white. 3
During the voir dire proceedings, defense counsel objected twice to the State’s apparent use of peremptory challenges to exсlude black jurors. On both occasions, the court took no action on the objections. Defense counsel reiterated its objection in its post trial motion, again to no avail.
On appeal, the petitioner claims to have argued that the exclusion of black jurors violated both the Illinois and United States Constitutions by depriving him of due process of law and an impаrtial jury. See Pet. Statement of Material Facts, at 1111; Pet. Mem. in Support of Summary Judgment, at 4-5. Although the claim was made that “the Illinois and United States Constitutions require that his conviction be reversed and remanded for a new trial,” petitioner’s characterization of his argument before the Illinois Appellate Court is not quite accurate. Pet.Ex. 7, at 9.
There, the petitioner eloquently argued that “racial bias is a tragic reality of our society and if prosecutors are free to form a jury based on race, bias will taint the jury’s ability to fairly evaluate evidence.”
4
Pet.Ex. 7, at 8-9. While noting that both the Illinois and United States Constitutions provide for the right to trial by an impartial jury, the petitioner argued that the test set forth by the United States Supreme Court in
Swain v. Alabama,
On March 11, 1982, the Appellate Court rejected petitioner’s argument concerning the State’s use of peremptories. Relying on state law authorities, the Court held:
Although the practice of using peremptory challenges to strike all blacks from the jury has been condemned, the evidence of purposeful exсlusion must be apparent, and it is the responsibility of the trial court to determine whether the State has properly exercised its peremptory challenges. In the case at bar, the defense brought its contention to the trial court’s attention. The trial court did not find the State was exercising its peremptory challenges improperly, and, on this record, we cannot sаy that the trial court abused its discretion.
Pet.Ex. 9 at 8-9
(People v. Miller,
Petitioner did not appeal his decision to the Illinois Supreme Court. His petition for certiorari to the United States Supreme Court was denied on August 23,1984.
Miller v. Illinois,
II. Prior Proceedings on Petitioner’s Federal Habeas Corpus Claims.
As noted at the outset of this opinion, the respondents’ motion for summary judgment wаs granted in part and denied in part on October 17, 1984. On February 13 of the following year, in response to a motion to reconsider the denial of summary judgment on the peremptory challenge issue, Judge McMillen held that petitioner “did not waive his right to a Swain v. Alabama decision.” Miller, slip op. at 2 (N.D.Ill. Feb. 13, 1985).
In response to further motions, however, the court held the
Swain
claim was barred on exhaustion grounds. It reasoned that a
Swain
claim raised a different legal theory, dependent on a different order of proof, than a claim for discriminatory use of рeremptories in a single case.
Miller,
slip op. at 2 (N.D.Ill. June 3, 1985) (citing
United States ex rel. Nance v. Fairman,
These rulings left outstanding petitioner’s claim that the prosecution used its peremptories unconstitutionally and discriminatorily in petitioner’s case. The court, aware of the Second Circuit’s opinion in
McCray v. Abrams,
DISCUSSION OF LEGAL ISSUES
The petitioner essentially presents three alternative arguments which he claims entitled him to relief. Stated most briefly, these claims allege (1) that the State violat *178 ed petitioner’s constitutional rights by its use of peremptory challenges in his individual case, (2) that the State’s use of peremptoriеs unconstitutionally impaired petitioner’s Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury, and (3) that the State’s discriminatory exclusion of black jurors violated petitioner’s Fourteenth Amendment rights as articulated by Swain v. Alabama. Although I sympathize with petitioner’s well-argued positions, I cannot accept them. I take up the questions in turn.
I. The Batson or Single Case Theory
In
Batson,
the Supreme Court overruled
Swain
to the extent that the earlier case required a challenger of a prоsecutor’s use of peremptories to prove systematic exclusion of blacks over a number of cases. — U.S. -,
The rule in Batson v. Kentucky is an explicit and substantial break with prior precedent. In Swain v. Alabama, the Court held that, although the use of peremptory challenges to strike black jurors on account of race violated the Equal Protection Clause, a defendant could not establish such a violation solely on proof of the prosecutor’s action at his own trial. Batson overruled that portion of Swain____
Petitioner argues that he should not be precluded by Allen from making a Bat-son showing because his case was “clearly a precursor for Batson ” and that he “should not be denied his constitutional rights simply by unfortunate timing and the Court’s reluctance to consider the issue when the petitioner first raised it in 1983____” Pet. Reply Mem. in Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, at 4, 5. ,He also suggests that the policies underlying Allen have no force when viewed in the context of his case and that their application to him would be anomalous. Id.
Such anomalous results, however, are inherent in any decision changing the law prospectively. The
Allen
court explicitly concluded that
“Batson
should not be applied retroactively on collateral review of convictions that became final before our opinion was announced.”
II. The Sixth Amendment Impartial Jury Theory
In an apparent attempt to alleviate the widely рerceived injustice of
Swain,
several courts prior to
Batson
held that a prosecutor’s use of peremptory challenges to exclude blacks from petit juries violated the Sixth Amendment’s cross-sectionality requirement articulated in
Taylor v. Louisiana,
Petitioner contends that despite this action,
McCray
and
Booker
retain their validity. That contention is untenable in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Lockhart v. McCree,
— U.S. -,
In reversing that holding, the Supreme Court specifically focused on the Court of Appeals’ interpretation of the cross-sectionality requirement. That requirement was first spelled out by the court in
Taylor v. Louisiana,
which held unconstitutional state conduct preventing pools of potential jurors from mirroring the population at large through the systematic exclusion of distinctive groups in the community.
We have never invoked the fair cross-section principle to invalidate the use of either for-cause or peremptory challenges to prospective jurors, or to require petit juries, as opposed to jury panels or venires, to reflect thе composition of the community at large. The limited scope of the fair cross-section requirement is a direct and inevitable consequence of the practical impossibility of providing each criminal defendant with a truly “representative” petit jury____ We remain convinced that an extension of the fair cross-section requirement to petit juries would be unworkable and unsound, and we decline [the] invitation to adopt such an extension.
Lockhart,
Petitioner here argues that, contrary to the statement quoted above, the Supreme Court has, in fact, extended the Sixth Amendment to the selection of jurors on petit juries. He notes that in
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
The problem with this argument is that it ignores the extremely limited nature of the Court’s decision in
Witherspoon
and its subsequent refusal to expand that ruling.
See Lockhart,
III. The Swain Systematic Discrimination Claim
As noted abоve, on June 3, 1985, Judge McMillen held that petitioner could not raise a
Swain
systematic discrimination claim in this habeas action because the claim had not been exhausted in the Illinois courts. Petitioner asks me to reconsider this ruling in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Batson.
Like
Swain,
the
Bat-son
decision rested on the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Batson,
Petitioner is correct that variations in legal theory between the arguments presented before a state court and those made in a habeas proceeding will not raise the exhaustion doctrine’s bar.
See Nance,
As I noted in another habeas case earlier this year, “to determine whether a petitioner has in fact raised a particular constitutional issue with a state appellate court, the Supreme Court has instructed lower courts to decide whether the petitioner has provided the state with a ‘fair opportunity’ to apply the controlling federal legal principles to the facts bearing on his constitutional claim.”
U.S. ex rel. Bachman v. Hardy,
(a) rely on pertinent federal cases employing constitutional analysis; (b) rely on the state cases employing constitutional analysis in like fact situations; (c) assert the claim in terms so pаrticular as to call to mind a specific right protected by the Constitution; or (d) allege a pattern of facts that is well within the mainstream of constitutional litigations____
United States ex rel. Cole v. Lane,
Even under the most generous reading of the papers before the Illinois Appellate Court, it is clear that petitioner does not meet the Sullivan test. His argument before the state court, as described in detail in the statement of facts, was essentially a plea to the state courts to reject the federal standard articulated by Swain and to forge a new path on state constitutional grounds. He neither argued applicable federal cases, 7 relied on state cases following federal law, or presented evidence of systematic discrimination which would suggest he was raising a Swain argument. The Appellate Court’s ruling, based entirely on state law, indicates that the three judges sitting there had a similar view of petitioner’s efforts.
In short, I not only think that petitioner did not raise a federal equal protection claim at his state court appeal, I believe that he knowingly and explicitly decided to waive the issue, either for tactical reasоns or out of a sincere belief that the federal rule was wrong. Even assuming that petitioner did not intentionally relinquish his known rights, his actions at the state court level forfeited his right to habeas relief on this claim.
Nutall v. Greer,
This view is consistent with Judge McMillen’s ruling that petitioner could not maintain a systematic discrimination claim but could pursue an individual case discrimination theory. My only difference with my colleаgue’s ruling concerns his characterization of petitioner’s efforts as exhausted. The exhaustion requirement refers only to state remedies still available at the time the federal petition is filed.
Engle v. Isaac,
I emphasize that my difference with Judge McMillen is academic. The question whether petitioner waived or failed to exhaust the claim makes no practical difference in this case, as under either standard petitioner cannot maintain a systematic discrimination claim under Swain.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth herein, the petitiоner’s motion for summary judgment is denied and the respondents’ motion for summary judgment is granted.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. Petitioner has submitted both a motion for summary judgment and a supplemental motion for summary judgment raising alternative arguments. For ease of discussion, I have treated all of petitioner's arguments as if they were raised in one motion.
. Although not explicitly spelled out in the statement of facts, it appеars from the parties’ papers that the petitioner is black.
. Five additional prospective jurors were called for the purpose of selecting alternates. Of these prospectives, one was black; he was dismissed by the trial court for cause.
. The unquestioned assumption here, of course, is that jurors' backgrounds significantly affect the verdicts they reaсh. That belief is widely assumed, but as Holmes once quipped, "certitude is not the test of certainty.” O.W. Holmes, Collected Legal Papers, 311 (1918). In fact, empirical research on the question, including some highly realistic and controlled recent studies, fairly uniformly report "no simple relationship” between individual characteristics and initial verdict preferences. See Hastie, Penrod, and Pennington, Inside the Jury 237 (1983); Simon, The Jury: Its Role in American Society 45-46 (1980) (observing that an in-depth review of the literature shоwed "only slight and not consistent differences in the verdicts jurors with different class, ethnic, and sexual characteristics reached”). Moreover, the social science literature is "unanimous" in finding that the quantity and quality of evidence is the most powerful influence on jury decisionmaking. Hastie, Pen-rod, and Pennington, Supra, at 123; Saks and Hastie, Social Psychology in Court 68 (1977).
. The evidence presented by the petitioner that the State used its peremptory challenges on the basis of race alone at his trial is undisputed. The petitioner also submits evidence of systematic discrimination by the prosecutor as mandated by Swain. That evidence is uncontradicted as well.
. Those jurors, also called "Witherspoon-excludables” after the Court's decision in
Witherspoon v. Illinois,
. Petitioner's citation of Swain in the Appellate Court appears solely for the purpose of arguing that its standard should not be followed in interpreting the Illinois state constitution; Taylor v. Louisiana was cited only for the general proposition that the federal Constitution provides for trial by an impartial jury. No attempt was made to argue that these cases stood for the proposition urged by petitioner here.
