Benjamin Omoruyi appeals his conviction for possession of counterfeit securities in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 513.
I.
Omoruyi argues that the district court erred by permitting the government to peremptorily challenge female prospective jurors on the basis of gender.
The first government peremptory challenge was exercised against an unmarried white woman, and the second against an unmarried black woman. Omoruyi objected to the second challenge on the basis that it was racially discriminatory. In response to the district court’s request to explain the challenge, the government counsel responded: “Because she was a single female and my concern, frankly, is that she, like the other juror I struck, is single and given defendant’s good looks would be attracted to the defendant.” Although the district court suggested that the government “use a little better standard” in articulating its peremptory challenges, the court denied the defendant’s motion for a new jury.
In
United States v. DeGross,
The government argues that the focus of the strike was the jurors’ marital status, not gender. Peremptory challenges based on marital status do not violate
Batson. See United States v. Nichols,
However, the prosecutor’s comments that he was concerned that these single women would be attracted to the defendant reveal that the jurors were struck because they were women; the prosecutor did not strike the single men on the venire. The government’s articulated reason for striking these women is in no way based upon their qualifications to serve as jurors but rather on “the false assumption that [single women] are unqualified to serve as jurors ... [or] are unable to consider impartially the ease” against Omoruyi.
DeGross,
The government argues that the fact that there were six women on the petit jury, combined with the fact that it did not exercise four of its peremptory challenges, cuts against the finding of a pattern of discrimination.
See Nichols,
A pattern of discrimination is not necessary if there is evidence which reveals a discriminatory motive in challenging jurors. See United States v. Lorenzo,
There was "an admission of purposeful gender discrimination" in this case which rio-latecl the defendant's right to equal protection, see id. at 1443, and Omoruyi's conviction is reversed. It is therefore unnecessary to reach Omoruyi's argument that the district court abused its discretion by denying his motion for continuance of the trial due to the unavailability of Criminal Justice Act funds to pay his expert handwriting witness.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
