Defendant Deborah Brown appeals from a conviction, entered in district court for the Northern District of New York (Mordue, J.), for mail fraud and conspiracy to defraud the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). She argues that the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge against a black venire member on the basis of race, in violation of
Batson v. Kentucky,
BACKGROUND
Defendant-Appellant Deborah Brown and her mother, Mattie L. Brown, were convicted in 2002 for misdeeds connected to their positions as directors of Utica Head Start, a federal childcare program. 1 Specifically, Deborah Brown was found guilty, following a jury trial in district *658 court in the Northern District of New York (Mordue, J.), (1) of conspiracy to defraud HHS, and to convert federal funds, by engaging in nepotism and conflicts of interest, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371; and (2) of mail fraud, by lying to a mortgage company about her employment status at Utica Head Start, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. She was sentenced to a 24-month prison term and is currently serving her sentence.
The Batson Objection and Response
During jury selection prior to. trial, the prosecutor exercised a peremptory challenge against one of three African-Americans in the venire. Brown’s trial counsel made a timely Batson challenge, asserting that the prosecutor had impermissibly struck the potential juror on the basis of her race. The prosecutor did not explicitly concede that the defense had made a pri-ma facie showing of discrimination, but he did offer a race neutral explanation. He stated that the potential juror in question, a Ms. Diane Underwood, “explained to the jury that she’s very active in local and I guess regional church.” He went on to note that “[o]ne of Mattie Brown’s supporters who is going to be here through the trial I guess was identified by her as someone that she knows from meetings, and I just feel that that would — that connection would subtlely or unsubtlely bias her in favor of the defendants and so that’s my basis for my objection to her.”
The prosecutor’s proffered reason related in part to an exchange between the court and Ms. Underwood, which occurred earlier during voir dire. The relevant portion follows:
CouRt: Okay. All right. Can you think of anything I should ask you that has not been asked?
Underwood: I wanted to — the people that are in here today, in the back, are they a part of this?
Court: Yes.
Underwood: I go — I’m [a] member of the Churches of God In Christ Jurisdiction Number 1 ... [A]nd the elder back there, I don’t know him personally, but I know he’s an elder in that jurisdiction.
Court: Okay. Now is that going to affect your ability to serve, be a fair juror? Underwood: Oh, no.
Court: I don’t know if he’s going to testify or not, but, you know of him. Underwood: I know that he attends, he’s an elder there, I don’t know him personally.
Court: All right. Thank you. 2
After the prosecutor gave his initial explanation for striking Ms. Underwood— her familiarity with this church elder— defense counsel responded by observing that “she unequivocally stated it wouldn’t have any effect on how she would be as a juror in this case.” The prosecutor then offered a second reason for the strike: Ms. Underwood’s avid participation in church affairs. Ms. Underwood had told the court that in her “spare time,” she liked to “[g]o to church.” And during the prosecutor’s own questioning of the venire members, Ms. Underwood had explained that she traveled twice a year from Syracuse to Rochester for “state meeting[s],” and had indicated that she also attended national meetings in Memphis. Based on these responses, the prosecutor said:
*659 I also find that, also just for the purposes of making a record, Juror Number 2, Miss Saliba, I’m striking her in part because she’s married to a pastor and my general feeling as a prosecutor, that people who are very active in church groups sometimes find it very difficult to judge others and so I think my strike of Miss Underwood is consistent with my other strike.
Upon hearing this second reason, the district court interjected that the Book of John contains the admonition “let not you who sinned cast the first stone, something like that.” Neither lawyer responded to the district court’s citation, of scripture, nor did defense counsel object to this second reason for striking Ms. Underwood. Instead, he continued to focus on the first reason, arguing that she never “indicated that she knew the pastor” and that she “recovered herself very well” by stating she would have no trouble being impartial. The prosecutor responded to these arguments by returning to Ms. Underwood’s church activities: “Again, I’m not challenging her for cause. I go to church with a number of ladies like Ms. Underwood and Ms. Saliba and they’re wonderful women. If I had an illness in the family, they’d be the first person I’d call on the phone; that doesn’t mean I want them to sit on a criminal jury.”
At that stage, the district court overruled defense counsel’s Batson challenge, concluding that the prosecutor had “laid a sufficient basis for why he exercised that peremptory.” Neither the court nor defense counsel ever directly addressed the prosecutor’s explanation regarding the ve-nire member’s participation in church affairs. Thus, while defense counsel had raised a race-based Batson challenge during jury selection — a challenge which was ultimately denied — he never offered a religion-based Batson challenge.
Post-trial motions
In a post-trial motion for a judgment of acquittal and/or a new trial, defendant Mattie Brown reasserted her race-based Batson claim, and, for the first time, offered a religion-based Batson objection as well. Deborah Brown also filed post-trial motion papers, but did not raise any Bat-son claim. During oral argument on the motions, however, defense counsel for Deborah Brown made several arguments in connection with the Batson challenge. Three are worth some discussion.
First, Deborah Brown asserted that the government had no factual basis for concluding that the man recognized by Ms. Underwood was actually a “supporter” of Mattie or Deborah Brown. Her defense counsel surmised during oral argument that the prosecutor must have assumed a connection between the pastor and the defendants because all three of them were black. The prosecutor responded by observing that “one of the Assistant U.S. Attorneys in our office is a man of color from the Utica area who recognized him as a pastor from that area and I don’t think it is unreasonable to assume that a pastor from the Utica area who shows up in the audience ... may be a supporter.” The judge indicated that he had drawn a similar inference: “I was under the impression that he was also there as a supporter of Mattie Brown.”
Second, defense counsel argued that the prosecutor’s concerns about Ms. Underwood’s involvement in her church were simply an “afterthought,” and therefore pretextual. The prosecutor insisted that he had stricken the juror for both reasons, and had offered the additional reason to show that he was not singling out black venire members, but rather treating all potential jurors equally.
Third, Deborah Brown’s counsel stated that Batson and its progeny do not permit *660 the use of peremptory challenges to strike venire members because of their religious beliefs, and that Ms. Underwood had been impermissibly struck on the basis of her religion. The government responded by noting that defense counsel had failed to raise a religion-based Batson challenge during jury selection, and hence that any inquiry on post-conviction review must apply plain error review. Moreover, according to the government, because the Second Circuit had never conclusively decided the issue, the error in question could not possibly have been plain. Defense counsel, in response, asserted that the trial court had prevented the defendants from fully articulating their Batson challenge — thus discharging the Browns from their obligation to object.
The Decision Below
The district court rejected both the race- and religion-based Batson challenges and denied the post-trial motions. First, Judge Mordue concluded that he had correctly followed the prescribed inquiry when the race-based challenge was raised; that is, he had “determined that defendants had not carried their burden of showing intentional racial discrimination and allocated credibility to the prosecutor’s explanation finding it to be sufficient.” He also found that “the record demonstrate^] ... that defense counsel had ample opportunity to speak” before the court ruled. Finally, after finding that no relevant objection had been made at trial, the court applied a plain error standard to the religion-based challenge. In a footnote, the court concluded that, “[bjecause the law is unclear [on whether religion-based peremptory strikes are proper], any failure by the Court to sustain defendant’s objection on the basis of religion could not be plain error.”
DISCUSSION
On appeal, we are presented with two questions. First, did the prosecutor exercise a peremptory challenge against a black venire member on account of her race? Second, did the court below commit plain error in upholding the prosecutor’s exercise of that same strike, when it was explicitly based, at least in part, on the venire member’s participation in religious activities? We consider each of these questions in turn.
Defendant’s Race-Based Objection
In
Batson,
the Supreme Court set forth a three-prong test to determine whether a peremptory challenge has been exercised on the basis of race, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. First, the defendant must establish a
prima facie
case of discrimination. Second, the prosecutor must offer an explanation for the strike that is, on its face, race-neutral. Third, the trial court must determine whether the defendant has carried her burden of proving that the government’s proffered reason was pretextual, and that the strike was indeed motivated by purposeful discrimination.
Whether or not the defendant properly established a
prima facie
case is not before us, because “[o]nce a prosecutor has offered a race-neutral explanation ... and the trial court has ruled on the ultimate question of intentional discrimination,” both of which occurred in this case, “the preliminary issue ... becomes moot.”
Hernandez v. New York,
Although Deborah Brown did not raise the race-based
Batson
challenge in her post-trial motions papers, the government does not argue on appeal that she failed to preserve this particular objection.
3
As a consequence, we review the trial court’s disposition of her race-based claim under the standard we normally apply in
Batson
cases. Once a trial judge finds that a prosecutor has exercised his peremptory challenges without discriminatory intent, that finding “may not be disturbed on appeal unless it is clearly erroneous.”
United States v. Franklyn,
Brown argues that both of the prosecutor’s proffered reasons for the strike were pretextual, and that the district court’s finding to the contrary was clearly erroneous. The defendant characterizes the prosecutor’s reference to Ms. Underwood’s religious activities as an “afterthought.” On her view, the prosecutor identified the venire member’s familiarity with the pastor seated in the courtroom as “the basis for my objection to her,” and only when challenged did he supplement that explanation with a second reason based on her participation in church affairs. This alone, according to Brown, is enough to establish pretext. Moreover, she asserts, the prosecutor did not strike two white venire members with expressed ties to their churches — one who sang in a church choir and one whose wife ran a church daycare center.
We are not convinced. The prosecutor immediately gave his second reason as an elaboration on his original one. Hence, the trial judge could readily have read it as an alternative rationale, rather than as an “afterthought.” Moreover, even though the prosecutor did not strike two churchgoers, he did strike a white woman, the wife of a pastor, because her answers reflected avid participation in church activities.. Under a clearly erroneous standard, we cannot conclude that the prosecutor was incapable of distinguishing between people with more, from those with less, of a connection to their churches. And we certainly cannot say that the district court clearly erred in finding that the prosecutor had done just that. 4
*662 We therefore affirm its ruling that the striking of Ms. Underwood was race-neutral and non-pretextual.
Defendant’s Religion-Based Objection
1. Standard of Review
The defendant also challenges the prosecutor’s peremptory strike on the grounds that it was impermissibly based on the venire member’s religion. She argues that the prosecutor intentionally removed Ms. Underwood from the panel because of her affiliation with a Christian church, and that doing so violated Batson, 5
In answer, the government first points out that Brown did not make a religion-based
Batson
objection during jury selection. It adds that her failure to do so prior to completion of the
voir dire
constitutes forfeiture of the right, absent extraordinary circumstances.
See Franklyn,
The defendant disputes forfeiture, asserting that her trial counsel raised a general
Batson
objection, that he gave the court an opportunity to “cure the error,” and that any further objection would have been fruitless.
6
We disagree. Defendant’s attempts to make her race-based challenge encompass her religion based claim do not avail. Her trial counsel was obligated to state distinctly the matter objected to and the grounds of the objection, and to do so at the time.
See Galarza v. Keane,
It follows that Brown cannot show, with respect to the religion issue, that “the trial court had been clearly apprised of the possibility of error and had disagreed, or had been given an opportunity to correct
*663
the error and had declined to do so.”
Fogarty v. Near N. Ins. Brokerage, Inc.,
It is not clear, however, from our recent cases, whether an unpreserved
Batson
objection permits appellate court review for plain error. The answer to this question turns on how we characterize the untimely challenge: is it waived or forfeited? Waiver — the “intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right,”
United States v. Olano,
Despite the waiver language in our recent cases, we believe that forfeiture is the more appropriate label.
8
Brown certainly failed timely to object, but it is not apparent from the record that she intentionally relinquished a “known right.” Ultimately, however, we need not determine whether plain error review obtains in
Batson
eases generally, or in this case specifically. For the government agrees that plain error review is proper here, thereby relinquishing the argument that Brown has waived, as opposed to forfeited, her objection.
See Atkins v. New York City,
*664 2. “Plain” error
To establish plain error, “there must be (1) ‘error,’ (2) that is ‘plain,’ and (3) that ‘affect[s] substantial rights.’ ”
Johnson v. United States,
In the
Batson
context, it is normally the case that the only complicated question is whether the second prong is satisfied— that is, whether the error at issue is “plain.” For if we decide that the district court’s approval of a challenge based on religion is error under the first prong, the third and fourth prongs of the
Olano
test are also generally met. The asserted right in question is that to equal protection of the laws, and the remedy for a violation is reversal. There is therefore usually little question that any
Batson
error we find would affect “a defendant’s substantial rights the violation of which would result in manifest injustice.”
United States v. Keppler,
What then does it mean for an error to be “plain?” The most obvious example of plain error is a trial court decision in direct contravention of governing case law. But it is not always necessary for the party alleging plain error to cite a circuit or Supreme Court precedent precisely on point. Plain error review is considerably more flexible.
Thus, “[a]n error is ‘plain’ if it is ‘clear’ or ‘obvious’ at the time of
appellate consideration.” United States v. Gordon,
Moreover, we will be more inclined to deem an error “plain” where it is clear from the record that failure to object below was not the result of a strategic decision.
Bayless,
S. The current doctrine on religion-based challenges
Against this background, we turn to the current law on religion-based challenges as applied to the case before us. The Supreme Court has not yet passed on whether religion-based peremptory challenges are unconstitutional.
See Davis v. Minnesota,
Only one circuit has decided the issue on the merits. In
United States v. DeJesus,
State courts have not been unanimous in their disposition of this issue. Since the Supreme Court decided, in
J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel T.B.,
Given the foregoing cases, the government argues that even a strike made strictly on the basis of religious affiliation (“I strike this venire member because she is Christian (or Muslim)”, etc.) would not be “plain” error. Because there is no specific Supreme Court or Second Circuit holding on point, the government says, that should be the end of the inquiry. But this view ignores the purposes, and the attendant flexibility, of plain error review. And, while there is no direct holding, nor uniformity across a range of other circuits, certain principles articulated in recent Second Circuit and Supreme Court cases, could nonetheless establish the plain constitutional infirmity of at least some types of religion-based peremptory challenges.
In
United States v. Nelson,
decided after
Berger,
we confronted the question of religious discrimination in jury selection.
First, the “defendant [has] the right to be tried by a jury whose members
*668
are selected pursuant to non-discriminatory criteria.”
Batson,
The Supreme Court has eloquently applied these principles in the race and gender contexts. We believe that they apply as plainly to jury selection based solely on a venire member’s religious affiliation.
See Overton v. Newton,
Exercising peremptory strikes simply because a venire member affiliates herself with a certain religion is therefore a form of “state-sponsored group stereotype[ ] rooted in, and reflective of, historical prejudice.”
J.E.B.,
In Nelson, we noted in dicta our clear belief, shaped by the foregoing principles, that parties cannot be permitted to strike a juror simply based on his religion. We reaffirm that here. Thus, if a prosecutor, when challenged, said that he had stricken a juror because she was Muslim, or Catholic, or evangelical, upholding such a strike would be error. Moreover, such an error would be plain. Given the relevant principles, as stated in Batson and J.E.B., it would be sufficiently “obvious,” and given the stakes, sufficiently “egregious,” to meet the second prong of the Olano test.
The reason given for the peremptory challenge in this case, however, is not so simple. It is far from clear what the prosecutor meant by “people very active in church groups.” Nor can we immediately discern his rationale for inferring that such people have trouble judging others. What is clear is that, like Ms. Saliba, the wife of a pastor who also suggested that she was deeply involved in the work of her church, Ms. Underwood stood out from other venire members because of her religious activities, not her membership in a Christian congregation. The prosecutor’s focus on activism, rather than belief or affiliation, is reflected in his decision not to strike at least two other venire members who identified themselves as Christians, but did not express the same degree of participation in religious activities.
Differentiating among prospective jurors on the basis of their activities does not plainly implicate the same unconstitutional proxies as distinctions based solely on religious identity. The prosecutor may well have believed that people active in church groups engage in charitable pursuits, public service activities, and support groups. Thus, he described Ms. Underwood and Ms. Saliba, during jury selection, as the “first [people] I’d call on the phone” if “I had an illness in the family.” And he might well have thought that these good works, in turn, would likely increase their sympathy for people in distress, including criminal defendants.
This may be a dubious inference, but that does not make it an unconstitutional one. Avid participation in
secular
charita
*670
ble enterprises can give rise to the same inference: that individuals who devote themselves to aiding the alienated elements of our society, for whatever reason, are more likely to be sympathetic to defendants. As a result, one would expect a prosecutor, who held such a view, to strike the “religious activist” in one case, while in the next case, and on the same assumption, to strike a secular activist. Consider the analogous case in which a prosecutor strikes a black community organizer who is committed to various social causes, including racial justice, on the ground that such organizers often have or develop strong opinions on issues relevant to the trial at hand. If the court determines that the prosecutor would, for the same reason, strike a white community organizer committed to the same causes, then the peremptory challenge is not based on a
Bat-son
suspect ground.
Cf. United States v. Thomas,
Of course, the possibility remains that the prosecutor was primarily driven by the assumption that particularly active churchgoers are more likely to hold certain religious
beliefs.
But we cannot say that it was plain error to conclude that he was not. We cannot do so, in part, because of the defendant’s failure to raise any objection (based on religion) to the prosecutor’s explanation. Indeed, this case illustrates one of the critical reasons why we subject forfeited claims to plain error review. The trial court did not have the opportunity, at the time of jury selection, to conduct an inquiry into the prosecutor’s reasons for exercising this challenge, and thereby to determine whether they were sufficiently religion-neutral.
McCrory,
Ultimately, the basis for the challenge is ambiguous enough so that any error the judge might have committed in permitting the strike was not “obvious” or “egregious.”
See Gore,
*671 Conclusion
We find no error in the district court’s decision to deny Deborah Brown’s race-based Batson challenge, and no plain error in the court’s decision to deny her religion-based Batson challenge. Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Mattie Brown is not a party to the instant appeal.
. The prosecutor followed up with more questions about her familiarity with the "elder” seated in the audience. She stated that she had seen him "lots of time," [sic] and that he was a member of "Bishop Kendrick’s staff.” She also said, "I don’t know his name, ... but I know his face.”
. Judge Mordue stated in a footnote that because Deborah Brown "did not raise the Bat-son issuefs] in her motion papers, the Court is without jurisdiction to address them, as they were first presented to the Court on July 5, 2001, more than a month past the post-trial motion filing deadline.” His findings on both the race-based and religion-based challenges thus relate only to Mattie Brown's post-trial objections. In the instant appeal, however, we treat those findings and conclusions as relevant to Deborah Brown’s arguments.
. Defendant would have us focus on the prosecutor’s initial explanation: the juror's familiarity with a supposed supporter of the Browns. She claims that the only basis for asserting that support was racial stereotyping. The prosecutor denies this vehemently. We express no view on whether this was or was not the ground for the assertion, because we do not need to. We note that even if it had been, it would fail to support a Batson claim. The exclusion of the juror would not have been because of her race, for the same explanation, based on the same alleged ster *662 eotyping, could as easily apply to a white prospective juror who was acquainted with the supposed supporter.
. The government argues that we need not reach this question because even if
one
of its reasons for striking the juror was improperly based on religion, there existed another,
Bat-son
acceptable, reason: the juror's acquaintance with an alleged supporter of the defendant.
See
fn.4,
supra.
The problem with this argument is that while we have noted that such dual motivations can be acceptable defenses in
Batson
cases,
see, e.g., Howard v. Senkowski,
. Defendant appears to abandon the argument, made below, that the trial judge affirmatively prevented her counsel from fully articulating her Batson challenge. In any event, the record does not support such a contention.
. First, the court states, “we hold that the failure to object to the discriminatory use of peremptory challenges prior to the conclusion of jury selection
waives
the objection.”
. We have previously "pause[d] to note [this] potentially confusing issue of terminology,” observing that our cases “do not always clearly distinguish between” the two concepts.
United States v. Bayless,
. Plain error review must not be confused with the standard applied by federal courts in reviewing state convictions on a writ of habe-as corpus. In the habeas context, a petitioner will only prevail when the state court’s adjudication "was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). "[Cjlearly established Federal law includes only holdings of Supreme Court decisions and does not include dicta .... ”
McKinney v. Artuz,
Even under the stringent requirements of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), however, we do not
*665
require habeas petitioners, in every case, to point to a prior holding that directly deals with the issue in their case. We still find that a state court contravened "clearly established federal law” if its decision "unreasonably failed to extend a ... Supreme Court defined ... legal principle to situations which that principle should have, in reason, governed.”
Kennaugh v. Miller,
Nor is plain error review equivalent to a qualified immunity inquiry, where we ask whether government officials violated "clearly established” rights.
See Thomas v. Roach,
In any event, plain error review, because it is concerned with efficient administration of justice within the federal court system, rather than issues of federalism or the conduct of executive and state officials, is even more flexible.
. This, of course, will occur only in the rare case. As a general rule, we reserve a finding of plainness to situations where a trial court's ruling contravenes clearly established precedent.
See, e.g., United States v. Weintraub,
.
See also Nelson,
. This is also because we do not want to encourage lawyers to “test [their] fortunes with the first jury,” while knowing there will be a "second round in the event of a conviction.”
McCrory,
. The Fifth Circuit held, in the habeas context, that extending
Batson
to religion would create a “new rule” of constitutional law.
Fisher v. Texas,
. Some state courts would forbid such challenges solely on state constitutional grounds.
See, e.g., State v. Fuller,
. Ultimately, the “significance of a jury in our polity as a body chosen apart from racial and religious manipulations is too great to permit categorization by race or religion even from the best of intentions.” Id. at 207-08.
. After noting that, under its "equal protection jurisprudence, gender-based classifications require 'an exceedingly persuasive justification in order to survive constitutional scrutiny,” the Court asked itself whether "peremptory challenges based on gender stereotypes provide substantial aid to a litigant's effort to secure a fair and impartial jury.”
J.E.B.,
. Put another way, "[¡Jury competence is an individual rather than a group or class matter. That fact lies at the very heart of the jury system. To disregard it is to open the door to class distinctions and discriminations which are abhorrent to the democratic ideals of trial by jury.”
Thiel v. S. Pac. Co.,
. Unlike the race and gender contexts, religious discrimination challenges are rarely brought under the equal protection clause, thanks to the existence of the First Amendment. First Amendment free exercise and establishment clause cases, however, also turn on application of strict scrutiny.
See, e.g., Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah,
. The Third and Seventh Circuits, in considering religion connected peremptory challenges, have focused exclusively on the distinction between affiliation and belief. Thus, the Seventh Circuit stated:
It is necessary to distinguish among religious affiliation, a religion's general tenets, and a specific religious belief. It would be improper and perhaps unconstitutional to strike a juror on the basis of his being a Catholic, a Jew, a Muslim, etc. It would be proper to strike him on the basis of a belief that would prevent him from basing his decision on the evidence and instructions, even if the belief had a religious backing; suppose for example that his religion taught that crimes should be left entirely to the justice of God. In between and most difficult to evaluate from the standpoint of Bat-son is a religious outlook that might make the prospective juror unusually reluctant, or unusually eager, to convict a criminal defendant. That appears to be this case.
Stafford,
