Dennis Scott Stewart, Stevie Hugh Stone, and Christopher Liff Daniel appeal their convictions for conspiracy to violate the civil rights of another, interference with the housing rights of another, and use of fire in the commission of a federal felony. Their three contentions are: that the district court improperly upheld the government’s
Batson v. Kentucky,
I. BACKGROUND
In 1991, Linda and Isaiah Ruffin, who are both black, moved their family into a home they had purchased near Horton, a small Marshall County community. The family included their two young daughters and Mrs. Ruffin’s 96-year-old aunt. They were some of the first blacks to live in that area, and the young Ruffin girls were among the first black children to attend the local public school in the nearby community of Douglas.
The presence of the Ruffins in the virtually all-white community agitated the membership of the Alabama Empire Knights of the Ku Klux Klan (“Klan”). During the group’s *922 meetings, Stevie Hugh Stone, a Klan leader, complained that “niggers” had moved into an all white community where they were not wanted. Christopher Lift Daniel and Dennis Scott Stewart were also Klan members.
At a mid-March 1991 meeting held at Daniel’s home, some Klan members, including these three defendants, agreed to burn a cross in the Ruffins’ yard. To create an alibi, they planned to attend a March 23, 1991, Klan rally in Sommerville, Alabama, and then to slip away from that rally to undertake the cross burning. On the prearranged date, Daniel, Stone, and Stewart attended the rally. After leaving the rally, those three, along with four other Klan members, Junior Whitlock, Marion Lynn Gibson, J.P. Warren, and Thomas Murphree, arrived at Daniel’s trader. 1 Stone informed Warren that the group was “fixing to go burn a cross” and would do it “over at those niggers that had moved in.” He said that Warren would light the cross as a new Klan member. Daniel retrieved a cross wrapped in burlap with a pointed tip; they loaded it and a can of diesel fuel into Murphree’s pickup truck.
Around 11:30 p.m. or midnight, the seven men left for the Ruffins’ home in the pickup truck and another vehicle. After stopping to douse the cross with the diesel fuel, they arrived at the Ruffins’ property. Warren stuck the cross into the ground in the Ruf-fins’ yard about twelve to fifteen feet from the Ruffins’ front door, and he lit it. The Ruffins and two guests were in the house. After hearing a noise, Mr. Ruffin retrieved his gun and went outside to investigate. When he saw the men burning the cross, he began firing his gun. Warren fled in the truck, and the burning cross tumbled over onto the lawn. When Mr. Ruffin stopped shooting, Whitlock drove the second vehicle in front of the Ruffins’ home, and from that vehicle Stone fired into the air at least three shots from a .22 caliber pistol. Stone told Whitlock that Stone had “seared the hell out of that guy [Mr. Ruffin].”
The three counts of the resulting indictment that are relevant to this appeal charged that Stone, Stewart, and Daniel knowingly and willfully: conspired to deprive the Ruf-fins of their civil right to “own, hold and occupy a dwelling without injury, intimidation, and interference because of their race and color,” in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 241; attempted to and actually did “injure, intimidate, and interfere” with the Ruffins’ occupation of a dwelling because of their race, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 3631(a); and, used fire during the commission of a federal felony, their § 241 conspiracy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 844(h)(1).
II. DISCUSSION
A. THE BATSON ISSUES
The first issue the defendants raise involves the district court’s action in sustaining the government’s Batson challenge to one of their peremptory strikes. The result of the court’s action was that a black female the defendants had attempted to keep off the jury served on it. Arguing that the court’s action was not justified under Batson, the defendants contend that it was an improper interference with their right to exercise their peremptory strikes. We do not think so, because we believe that the district court’s action in sustaining the government’s objection to the peremptory strike was proper under Batson.
1. The Jury Selection Facts
The jury was struck from a group of thirty venire members, four of whom were black. The defendants used three of their peremptory strikes to remove three of the four blacks from the jury. After all of the strikes of both sides had been exercised, one black female, Ms. Carter, was left on the jury. Before the jury was impaneled, however, the government objected that the defendants’ strikes of the three other black venire members were racially discriminatory. After requiring the defendants to explain those three strikes, the district court found that two of the three strikes had been sufficiently race neutral in motivation but that the defendants *923 had stricken Ms. Robertson because of her race, and it ordered her seated on the jury.
Because of the mechanics of the process used to select the jury, the district court’s action in returning Ms. Robertson to the jury had the ironic effect of displacing Ms. Carter from it. Thus, the net result of the court’s action sustaining the government’s Batson challenge to the strike of Ms. Robertson was that one black female replaced another on the jury.
2. The Batson Inquiry
In
Batson,
the Supreme Court held that a prosecutor’s use of peremptory strikes in even a single case to remove blacks from the jury on account of their race violates the Equal Protection Clause.
Batson v. Kentucky,
When we review the resolution of a
Batson
challenge, we give great deference to the district court’s finding as to the existence of a prima facie case.
See United States v. Moore,
We reject the defendants’ suggestion that a stricter standard of appellate review should apply to cases where the Batson issue involves defense strikes instead of prosecution strikes. A defendant’s misuse of the power of the court to deny a citizen her right to participate on a jury because of race is as reprehensible as a prosecutor’s, and the effect on the excluded juror is the same. Moreover, a district court’s superior ability as a Batson factfinder stems from two advantages it has over an appellate court: the positional advantage of being there among the facts as they unfold, and of seeing and hearing the explanations as they are given; and the experiential advantage of regularly being in the business of factfinding, which an appellate court is not. See
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City, N.C.,
Under the Batson framework, the district court first determines whether the party challenging the peremptory strikes has established a prima facie ease of discrimination. If so, the court requires the striking party to explain its reasons for the strikes in question, and then proceeds to determine whether those strikes were based upon the venire members’ race or instead upon race- *924 neutral reasons. Our review of the district court’s action in sustaining the government’s challenge to the defendants’ strike of Ms. Robertson follows that same route. First we review the district court’s prima facie case finding, and then we review its finding that the defense strike of Ms. Robertson was based upon her race.
a. The Prima Facie Case
The defendants argue that the government faded to establish a prima facie case of a Batson violation, and the government argues that because the defense was required to and did offer explanations for its strikes the pri-ma facie ease issue is moot. We disagree with both the government and the defendant — the prima facie case issue is not moot, but the government did make the necessary showing.
The government’s argument that the prima facie case issue becomes moot once the striking party proffers reasons for the challenged strikes is based upon the following language from
Hernandez v. New York,
Furthermore, the Supreme Court ruled in
Hernandez
that the trial court had not committed clear error by concluding that the peremptory strikes in question had not been used in a racially discriminatory manner and by rejecting the
Batson
challenge.
Id.
at 369-70,
In
Batson
and its progeny, the Supreme Court has repeatedly described the prima facie showing as a hurdle the party making a
Batson
challenge must clear before the striker is required to proffer any explanation for the challenged strikes.
E.g., J.E.B. v. Alabama ex rel. T.B.,
— U.S. -, -,
To ignore the prima facie showing requirement when reviewing a trial court’s Batson holding would be to ignore the Supreme Court’s repeated descriptions of that requirement as an integral part of any Batson analysis. No party challenging the opposing party’s use of a peremptory strike—whether that party be the government, a criminal defendant, or a civil litigant—is entitled to an explanation for that strike, much less to have it disallowed, unless and until a prima facie showing of racial discrimination is made. Accordingly, unless it concludes that a prima fade showing was made, an appellate court should neither reverse a trial court’s action refusing to disallow challenged strikes, nor should it affirm a trial court’s action disallowing strikes. No decision of the Supreme Court or of this Court is inconsistent with that principle, which flows directly from the language of Batson and its progeny.
We turn now to a review of the district court’s prima facie case determination in this case, a determination to which we owe great deference. See p. 924, above. After the government made the Batson challenge, the district court noted that all but one black juror had been stricken by the defendants, and later explained: “Let me say that I think the number of strikes against the members of the black race raises an inference at least that the reasons were—that they were struck because of their race....” In Batson, the Court explained that in order to determine whether a prima facie case has been established:
the trial court should consider all relevant circumstances. For example, a “pattern” of strikes against black jurors included in the particular venire might give rise to an inference of discrimination. Similarly, the [party’s] questions and statements during voire dire examination and in exercising his challenges may support or refute an inference of discriminatory purpose. These examples are merely illustrative. We have confidence that trial judges, experienced in supervising voire dire, will be able to decide if the circumstances concerning the [party’s] use of peremptory challenges creates a prima facie case of discrimination against black jurors.
Batson,
The defendants argue that the district court’s finding that a prima facie showing had been made is error because: the district court ultimately allowed two of the three challenged strikes; the disallowed strike did not alter the racial composition of the jury, but instead merely replaced one black juror with another; and, the defendants’ failure to strike one of the four black jurors should have prevented any prima facie case determination. We address each of these arguments in turn. To begin with, once a prima facie showing has been made and explanations for the challenged strikes have been required, a trial court’s ruling on the validity of those explanations does not retroactively affect the correctness of its pri-ma facie case determination. Batson and its progeny prescribe an orderly step-by-step process for resolving issues involving allegations of racial discrimination in the use of peremptory strikes, and that process is linear, not circular. The trial judge should not revisit the first step in the process after each additional step, nor will we.
With regard to the defendants’ second argument, it is true that application of
Batson
did not ultimately alter the racial composition of the jury in this case, but that fact does not undermine the validity of the district court’s earlier prima facie case determination. As we have explained, the prima
*926
facie case determination is the self-contained, first step in a one-direction process, which is not affected by events or determinations that occur thereafter. Moreover, any implication that there was no point in applying
Batson
in this case because the numbers did not change is wrong.
Batson
is not about numbers
per se.
It is about ending racial discrimination against people such as Ms. Robertson who, if the district court had not acted, would have been excluded from the jury because of her race.
See McCollum,
The defendants’ third and final argument on this issue is that a prima facie case did not exist because they did not strike one black venire member, Ms. Carter, who would have served on the jury had Ms. Robertson not displaced her. We have said before that “although the seating of blacks on the jury is a significant fact, it does not bar a finding of racial discrimination.”
Cochran v. Herring,
We hold that the district court did not err in finding that the government had made the necessary prima facie showing, requiring the defendants to justify each of the challenged strikes on race-neutral grounds.
b. The Defendants’ Proffered Explanations
The district court credited the defendants’ explanations for two of their three strikes against black venire members but did not credit their explanations for the third strike, the one used against Ms. Robertson. The defendants first proffered that they had struck Ms. Robertson because they, who were from rural Alabama, wanted to exclude urbanites from the jury. Ms. Robertson resided in metropolitan Birmingham. Although this would have been a race-neutral reason, we are not surprised that the district court was skeptical about it being the real reason for the strike. As the district court found, several unstruck white jurors were from metropolitan areas or did not reside in the part of Alabama close to the defendants’ homes.
Second, the defendants proffered that juror Robertson was undesirable from their perspective, because “she works for Blue Cross, and she had a math degree which tells me she’s an—my experience with math majors and people who deal with exact figures is that they need exact answers, and they intend [sic] to get hung up when dealing with generalities and things such as human error.” However, as the district court noted, the defendants failed to explain adequately why they did not strike white venire members who worked with numbers, such as one who was a bank accountant, and another who worked as an adjustor for Ford Motor Credit.
We recognize that failing to strike a white juror who shares some traits with a struck black juror does not itself automatically prove the existence of discrimination.
See Hollingsworth v. Burton,
Because the district court did not err in finding that the government had made a prima facie showing of racial discrimination in the defendants’ use of their peremptory strikes, and because it did not err in finding that Ms. Robertson was struck because of her race, we reject the defendants’ contention that the court erred in disallowing that strike.
B. THE DOUBLE JEOPARDY ISSUES
The defendants contend that because they were charged with, convicted of, and pun
*927
ished for three counts which essentially involved the same conduct — the cross burning — their constitutional right against being placed in jeopardy twice was violated. They rely upon the Double Jeopardy Clause’s protection ‘“against multiple punishments for the same offense.’ ”
Albernaz v. United States,
The Double Jeopardy Clause does not bar cumulative punishments' stemming from a single incident when Congress intends to prescribe cumulative punishments. In the cumulative punishment context, the “interest that the Double Jeopardy Clause seeks to protect” is one “ ‘limited to ensuring that the total punishment did not exceed that authorized by the legislature.’ ”
Jones v. Thomas,
In light of the well-established principle that Congress may intentionally prescribe multiple punishments for the same conduct, our task is to determine whether Congress manifested such an intent for the three statutory provisions under which the defendants were convicted. Section 241 punishes conspiracies to deprive citizens of federally protected rights, while § 3631 punishes the substantive offense of interfering or attempting to interfere with housing rights on the basis of race. “It has been long and consistently recognized by the Court that the commission of the substantive offense and a conspiracy to commit it are separate and distinct offenses.... And the plea of double jeopardy is no defense to a conviction for both offenses.”
Pinkerton v. United States,
The historical difference between the conspiracy and its end has led this Court consistently to attribute to Congress “a tacit purpose — in the absence of any inconsistent expression — to maintain a long-established distinction between offenses essentially different, — a distinction whose practical importance in the criminal law is not easily overestimated.”
Id.
at 779,
Thus we hold that the defendants can be convicted and punished both under § 241 for a conspiracy to violate the victims’ civil rights and under § 3631 for the actual threat to the victims’ right to remain in their domicile regardless of their race.
Cf. Catala Fonfrias v. United States,
*928
Nor does the Double Jeopardy Clause bar the defendants’ additional conviction and punishment for violation of § 844(h)(1). In that statutory provision itself, Congress unambiguously authorized cumulative punishment. When a defendant uses fire to commit a felony, the statute mandates that:
“in addition
to the punishment provided for such felony, [the defendant shall] be sentenced to imprisonment for 5 years but not more than 15 years.” 18 U.S.C.A. § 844(h)(1) (West Supp.1995) (emphasis added). We agree with the Eighth Circuit, that as § 844(h)(l)’s language “makes plain, Congress intended that the crimes of using fire to commit a felony and the felony itself may be punished cumulatively”
United States v. Shriver,
The defendants seek refuge in the holding of
Blockburger v. United States,
C. THE FIRST AMENDMENT ISSUES
The defendants contend that their conviction and punishment for burning a cross on the Ruffins’ front lawn violated their First Amendment rights. Relying primarily upon the Supreme Court’s decision in
R.A.V. v. City of St Paul, Minn.,
1.The Facial Validity Issue
Contrary to the defendants’ assertion, the Supreme Court’s
R.A.V.
decision did not preclude any and all regulation of cross burning.
See R.A.V.,
2. The Overbreadth and Vagueness Issue
The three statutory provisions also survive First Amendment scrutiny under the vagueness and overbreadth doctrines. For the reasons stated in their opinions, we agree with the Eighth and Ninth Circuits which have already rejected vagueness and over-breadth challenges to §§ 241 and 3631.
See United States v. McDermott,
3. The As Applied Issues
In
R.A.V.
itself, the Court recognized that there were legitimate ways to regulate cross burning: “Let there be no mistake about our belief that burning a cross in someone’s front yard is reprehensible. But St. Paul has sufficient means at its disposal to prevent such behavior-”
R.A.V.,
The act of burning the cross in the Ruffins’ front yard was an expression of the defendants’ hatred of blacks, just as the act of
*930
killing is sometimes an expression of a murderer’s hatred of the victim. Because we punish the act and not the opinion or belief which motivated it, the cross burning in this case was not protected by the First Amendment, just as a murder would not have been protected in similar circumstances. Notwithstanding the fact that some Klan cross burnings may constitute protected expression, these defendants did not bum their cross simply to make a political statement. The evidence clearly shows that the defendants intended to threaten and to intimidate the Ruffins with this cross burning. Klansman Warren testified that the Klan burns a cross in someone’s yard “just to intimidate them,” while Murphree added that the cross was intended to force the Ruffins to move out of their home. Even Daniel himself admitted at trial that a cross burning in someone’s yard “could probably be perceived as a threat.” Section 3631’s “requirement of intent to intimidate serves to insulate the statute from unconstitutional application to protected speech.”
Gilbert,
4. The Prosecutorial Comments
Pointing to prosecutorial comments about the Klan and about the defendants’ racist attitudes, the defendants also contend that the government convicted them “by putting the [djefendants’ ideology on trial.” The prosecutorial comments in question were about evidence of the defendants’ racial animus which was relevant not only as to motive but also to prove an element of the crime. To secure a conviction under § 3631, the government needed to prove that the defendants’ intended to interfere with the Ruffins’ housing rights because of their race. The fact that evidence of this intent and the defendants’ ultimate attack on the Ruffins is linked to Klan activities did not bar its presentation to the jury, nor did it make prose-cutorial comments about that evidence improper. “The First Amendment ... does not prohibit the evidentiary use of speech to establish the elements of a crime or to prove motive or intent. Evidence of a defendant’s previous declarations or statements is commonly admitted in criminal trials subject to evidentiary rules dealing with relevancy, reliability, and the like.”
Mitchell,
— U.S. at -,
5. The Judge’s Comments at Sentencing
At sentencing, the district court judge expressed her concern about the racial hatred preached by the Klan and her hope that the defendants would change their racist attitudes. Before imposing sentence on Stone, the court made the following remarks:
Mr. Stone, I have some things I’d like to say to you prior to imposing sentence. This case reminds us that racism in Amer-ica is not over. During the trial, there was an initial attempt to portray this as some sort of a prank based in part apparently on what was said to Ms. Ruffin by a sheriffs deputy when he responded to her call. This was no prank. This was an intentional act of discrimination. And in my opinion, you were the instigator of this act of intimidation and the leader of it.
You were the head of the Klan. The Grand Dragon was your title. I don’t know if it’s still your title or not. For years in America, the Klan has stood for intolerance, bigotry, hatred. It’s been at the core and the center of racial violence in America. The Ku Klux Klan has been responsible — and I want you to think about [ ] what the Ku Klux Klan has been responsible for — for shooting, mutilating, the lynching of innocent black American citizens. It’s been responsible for bombings and burnings of black churches. It’s been responsible for the murders of civil rights workers.
You and your wife were both members of the Klan, and you have two children. I don’t need to tell you this, but children *931 aren’t bom with prejudice. It’s a wonderful thing to think about that children are bom in this world with — they don’t have any prejudices. Children learn prejudice. I hope that this event will not cause your sons to believe somehow that the Ruffins or someone else is responsible for the sentence that you will now receive. I hope somehow that they can recognize that America is great because of our cultural diversity. Our diversity in America is a strength, not a weakness.
As you know, I’m sure it’s been explained to you at great length by Mr. Nad, the guidelines, of course, enacted by Congress are dictating in large part the sentence that you’re going to be receiving today. If it were within my power, it would be the wish of the Court to erase any racial hatred that you or your family members or your friends might still harbor. Of course, I’m a federal judge and have a lot of power, but that’s not one of the things that’s within my power. So because I’m not able to do that, I just have to hope that one day those feelings that you apparently feel towards members of the black race will change. And I hope the feelings of those in your community will change that support your beliefs, because racism cannot thrive in a community that says we won’t tolerate these attitudes, and we won’t tolerate these types of actions.
We live in a country, Mr. Stone, where people have the right to live where they want to and not be interfered with or intimidated because of their race or color. And you didn’t recognize that to be a fact, and now you’re going to suffer the consequences.
Although the details varied somewhat, the court made similar remarks before sentencing Daniel and Stewart.
The defendants complain about the court’s remarks and argue that their sentences were affected by their ideology. The record shows, however, that each defendant received a sentence at the lower end of the guideline range with no upward departure. Thus, the record reflects that the defendants were not sentenced based upon their membership in the Klan or their racial beliefs, but instead based upon their crimes and the relevant United States Sentencing Guidelines.
Cf. United States v. Rosenberg,
Even if the district court had factored the racist attitudes behind the crime into the sentences imposed, we seriously doubt that it would have been error. In
Barclay v. Florida,
To the extent that the defendants simply complain about being lectured by the judge at sentencing, we are not sympathetic. What the Alabama Supreme Court once said in a different context fits here as well:
The trial judge is a human being, not an automaton or a robot. He is not required to be a Great Stone Face which shows no reaction to anything that happens in his courtroom. Testimony that is amusing may draw a smile or a laugh, shocking or distasteful evidence may cause a frown or scowl, without reversible error being committed thereby. We have not, and hopefully never will reach the stage in Alabama at which a stone-cold computer is draped in a black robe, set up behind the bench, and plugged in to begin service as Circuit Judge.
*932
Allen v. State,
III. CONCLUSION
The convictions and sentences of the defendants are AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Whitlock, Gibson, Warren, and Mtuphree have all pleaded guilty to some offense related to this cross burning.
. This reading of § 844(h)(1) comports with our resolution of double jeopardy concerns relating to other statutes with similar language. For example, we have held that a defendant's punishment both for committing a bank robbery using a dangerous weapon and also for using and carrying firearms during the robbery, does not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause.
United States v. Ricks,
. The defendants also cite
Grady v. Corbin,
.As applied to these defendants, § 241 provided:
If two or more persons conspire to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person in any State ... in the free exercise or enjoyment *929 of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States ...
They shall he fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both....
18 U.S.C.A. § 241 (West Supp.1995).
. Section 844(h) provides that whoever:
uses fire or an explosive to commit any felony which may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, ...
... shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such felony, be sentenced to imprisonment for 5 years but not more than 15 years.
18 U.S.C.A. § 844(h) (West Supp.1995).
. As applied to the defendants, § 3631 provides that:
Whoever ... by force or threat of force willfully injures, intimidates or interferes with, or attempts to injure, intimidate or interfere with—
(a) any person because of his race, color, religion, sex, handicap ..., familial status ..., or national origin and because he is or has been ... purchasing, [or] occupying ... any dwelling ...
shall be fined under this subchapter or imprisoned not more than one year, or both....
42 U.S.C.A. § 3631 (West 1994).
