OPINION
Dеfendant-Appellant Angela Breasher McFerron (“McFerron”) challenges her 18 U.S.C. § 1623 conviction for perjury on the basis of the district court’s disposition of the government’s Batson challenges, raised in response to McFerron’s peremptory challenges to five white males on the venire panel. Fоr the reasons that follow, we reverse McFerron’s conviction and remand for a new trial.
I.
On September 6, 1995, McFerron’s husband, Kevin McFerron was tried in federal court on charges of drug trafficking and firearms violations. During the investigation of that case, authorities learned that McFerron approached Stephanie Johnson, a witness scheduled to testify in Kevin’s trial, and asked that Johnson give false exculpatory testimony. Subsequently, authorities tape-recorded a telephone conversation between McFerron and Johnson in which McFerron requested that Johnson give false testimony.
*953 At Kevin’s trial, McFerron testified. The government asked her if she had asked anyone to lie at Kevin’s trial. McFerron responded negatively. Thereafter, a federal grand jury charged McFerron with one count of perjury in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1623. McFerron went to trial and the jury was unable to reach a unanimous deсision. The district court thereupon declared a mistrial.
Jury selection in McFerron’s second trial began on October 9, 1996. McFerron, an African-American woman, exercised seven of her ten peremptory challenges on white males. The government objected under Bat- son 1 that McFerron was using her сhallenges in a discriminatory manner to systematically exclude white males from the jury. 2 The government specifically objected to McFerron’s use of peremptory challenges against five of the white males. 3
The district court conducted a Batson hearing at which time it determined that the government established a prima facie case that McFerron was exercising her peremptory challenges in a purposefully discriminatory fashion. 4 McFerron was then required to set forth nondiscriminatory reasons for the challenges with respect to the venire members against whom the government brought Batson challenges.
Regarding the first prospective jurоr, McFerron stated that she
just felt he would be ultra conservative and that his conservativeness rather than anything else would make him tend to lean more toward the government and have a tendency to associate himself more with the government and maybe not be as unbiased ... [and] based on his positiоn as a physician, a lot of people tend to believe physicians, that he might be able to sway people to believe whatever his opinion was more than an ordinary person.
As to the second venire member at issue, McFerron offered that “there was something he said about being an alternative [juror] in a criminal murder trial ... there was something in the tone of his voice about that I thought he was possibly extremely conservative ... I just got a feeling from him that he would not be able to be as impartial as other jurors.” As to the third challenged venire-person, McFerron explained that “he had a military background, which in my experience ... makes people see kind of black and white ... and he might be quick to make a judgment call on that account. His military background being somewhat the same as police type work.” Regarding the fourth challenged venireperson, McFerron stated that “the fact that he’s from Ripley, Tennessee, basically, maybe not as exposed to [an] urban type environment would also make him see things more simplistically and be less willing to be open-minded about the issues in this case.” As to the last venireperson at issue, McFerron stated that “he seemed urgent to get this over with and back to work, ... that could be a real detriment when it comes time for the jury to deliberate if he is anxious to get out and willing to change his mind if that will get him out quicker.”
The district court then considered each of the articulated reasons expressed above as they related to each of the challenged venire-persons. As to the first venireperson, the district court rejected the defense’s proffered reason, stating, “the party whose peremptory challenge has been objected to under Batson ... has failed in her burden of persuasion regarding a nondiscriminatory basis for assertion of peremptоry challenge ...” (em *954 phasis added). The district court rejected the other proffered reasons in much the same way, stating as to the second prospective juror: “[I]t appears that the use of the analysis that he was extremely conservative without any basis really for that is simply a code word or maybe a code word [for males], [and] appears to be not very persuasive to the court ... [McFerron] has failed in her burden of persuasion regarding a nondiscriminatory basis for assertion of a peremptory challenge.” (emphasis added). The district court also rejected the asserted reason as to the third challenged venireperson, stating that “if yоu choose military experience of people of [the venireperson]’s age, you will naturally exclude many males and almost no females, so it is a code word for male and, therefore, could not be accepted as a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for exсluding him.... [McFerron] has failed in her burden of persuasion.” (emphasis added). In addition, the district court rejected the reason proffered regarding the fourth challenged venireperson because it failed “to have a factual basis in the record____ It says that he would see things more simplisti-eally. That, again, appears tо be a code word to exclude males in this case.... [McFerron] has failed ... on her burden of persuasion regarding nondiscriminatory basis for assertion of a peremptory challenge.” (emphasis added). As to the last venireper-son at issue, the district court explained that McFerron carried the burden of persuasion and that she had not persuaded the court that the venireperson actually had an urgency to end jury duty and return to activities at his place of employment. In sum then, the district court rejected McFerron’s proffered reasons as to all five of the challenged veni-repersons on thе basis that McFerron failed to meet her burden of persuasion. The district court then seated the five venire members against whom McFerron had attempted to exercise peremptory challenges.
Following trial, the jury convicted McFer-ron and the district court subsequently sentenced her to а five-year term of imprisonment. McFerron then appealed to this court, contending reversible error in the district court’s resolution of the government’s Batson challenges to the venire panel.
II.
A.
McFerron argues that the district court committed reversible error in regard to its handling of the government’s Batson claims. Specifically, McFerron contends that the district court committed legal error in imposing on her a burden of persuasion as to the validity of her peremptory strikes when the Supreme Court has required only that she present a facially valid, race-neutral explanation for exercising such a strike.
In determining whether a party has committed a Batson-type violation in its exercise of a peremptory challenge, the Supreme Court has explained that a district court must follow a three-step process. 5
Under our Batson jurisprudence, once the opponent of a peremptory challenge has made out a рrima facie case of racial discrimination (step 1), the burden of production shifts to the proponent of the strike to come forward with a race-neutral explanation (step 2). If a race-neutral explanation is tendered, the-trial court must then decide (step 3) whether the oрponent of the strike has proved purposeful discrimination.
Purkett v. Elem,
B.
The Supreme Court has provided a clear answer to the question presented by McFerron’s appeal. In
Purkett,
Because the Court has explаined that the neutral justification need only be facially valid and not persuasive, the district court erred by imposing a burden of persuasion on McFerron and evaluating her proffered explanations by such a test. “It is not until the third step that the persuasiveness of the justification becomes relevаnt—the step in which the trial court determines whether the opponent of the strike has carried his burden of proving purposeful discrimination.” Id. at 768,
As McFerron’s proffered reasons in this case were not facially discriminatory,
see e.g., United States v. Tucker,
C.
The government contends that even if the district court committed error, we should consider such an ei'ror harmless. This suggestion has been resoundingly rejected by every circuit court that has considered the issue.
See United States v. Hall,
Likewise, we reject the application of harmless error analysis to the denial of a right to exercise peremptory challenges. This type of error involves a “structural error,” which is not subject to harmless error analysis.
See Arizona v. Fulminante,
Accordingly, we find that harmless error analysis is not applicable to the district court’s erroneous application of the three-step Batson test and the improper denial of McFerron’s peremptory challenges.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the judgment of conviction and REMAND for a new trial.
Notes
.
Batson v. Kentucky,
. It is not entirely clear whethеr the government’s challenges were based on race, gender or both. The district court, however, focused on discrimination in the form of gender bias.
. The government conceded that McFerron set forth nondiscriminatory reasons for peremptory challenges as to two of the white males.
.The district court stated:
[W]е have changed the character of the jury in this process. We now ■ have many more females than males, and we have somewhat more blacks than whites, and we have basically gotten rid of any white males deliberating on the jury. We have no white males deliberating on the jury and we started out with — and wе only have one male deliberating on the jury, and we started out with basically almost 50/50 balance, so, [the government] has met its burden of proof in demonstrating that there is certainly a prima facie case in this situation.
. In
Georgia v. McCollum,
. In
J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.,
