Defendant Donald E. Hinton, Sr., an African-American, raises a challenge under
Batson v. Kentucky,
During voir dire, the government used a peremptory strike to remove a black male juror, Ronald Porter (juror No. 20), from the panel, and defense counsel immediately objected. In a sidebar, the prosecutor indicated that Porter had worn a Malcolm X hat when he entered the courtroom, and had his arms folded across his chest at one point during voir dire. Defense counsel objected:
PROSECUTOR: Your Honor, the Government strikes number 20.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I would ask the record to reflect that juror number 20 is a black man.
PROSECUTOR: No objection. May I ask that the record reflect that juror 20 came into court wearing a Malcolm X hat.
* * * * * *
THE COURT: There is something more to that?
PROSECUTOR: Well, I assume we’re going to have a Batson motion. I want to make that point if we’re going to have a Batson motion.
THE COURT: Well, this is the time to rule.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I am making a motion then, Your Honor.
THE COURT: Your reason for that is?
PROSECUTOR: He came into court wearing a Malcolm X hat. I believe that indicates a potential for an attitude that is not favorable to the government. I can elaborate if you want me to. I also didn’t like what I perceived as body language. *397 The Court may have noticed when the government was asked to stand up and introduce [its] case agent and [its] witnesses, juror number 20 folded his arms across his chest in a way that I interpreted to be a negative body language. Those are the two reasons I would cite to the court. DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, I mean the fact that he wore a Malcolm X hat, which as I understand is a movie that was produced by Spike Lee and there are probably millions and millions of these hats all around the United States, and I would like to point out to the court that I own one. But as far as body language, I noted that there were several persons that had their arms crossed the entire length of the voir dire including, I believe juror number 12, which [sic] I struck, sat there with her arms crossed the entire time and there was one sitting behind me who had his arms crossed the entire time. Those are both white jurors. I think that these excuses given by the government are simply pretenses that deny my client and juror number 20, Ronald Porter, his right to sit on a jury free from racial bias.
THE COURT: All right. I think the Government has articulated a nonracial reason for striking juror number 20, so I deny your Batson motion. It is your turn.
The prosecutor’s focus was on a perceived militant anti-government aspect of Malcolm X, not his race. The challenge is to a presumed extreme position, something that might interfere with one’s ability to be open and unbiased, even in a trial that does not carry any particular ties to racial issues.
See United States v. Payne,
That is not to say a hat is always (or ever) an accurate or reliable indication of one’s political stance. A prosecutor often must rely on the scant information available to him when making decisions about how to exercise the government’s peremptory challenges. The prosecutor does not necessarily have to provide a particularly
strong
reason for striking a juror — just a
nonracial
reason. In this case, there is nothing in the prosecutor’s explanation that indicates he was doing anything but challenging jurors who might be predisposed not to convict if the evidence warranted such an outcome. The explanation is not an “implausible or fantastic” justification.
Purkett v. Elem,
— U.S. -, -,
The prosecutor also relied on Porter’s folded arms as a race neutral reason for striking him from the panel. Body language has long been used as a basis for peremptory challenges.
See, e.g., United States v. Forbes,
The “science” of choosing jurors often depends on the intuitive senses of the attorneys, and the non-discriminatory exercise' of that intuition has been long upheld by the courts. For example, it is proper to rely on such reasons as too little eye contact,
United States v. Cartlidge,
It is only necessary that a peremptory challenge “not be based on either the race of the juror or the racial stereotypes held by the party.”
Georgia v. McCollum,
And the court on appeal generally must defer to the district court’s credibility findings. The district court judge here believed that the prosecutor’s intent was not to discriminate on the basis of race, and those findings should be affirmed absent clear error.
See Hernandez v. New York,
We also note other evidence pointing to a lack of discriminatory intent. The venire panel included 36 people, four of whom were African-American. The record does not reflect whether other minorities were present on the panel. Prior to the government’s striking Porter, the district court excused one black woman (juror No. 16) for hardship. Defense counsel immediately commented on the court’s action:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Judge, I do want to make for the record — My client is a black male, and that juror 16 is a black female, and there are only four blacks in the entire panel. And by excusing juror number 16 it has lessened the number of African Americans that are left.
THE COURT: All right, you have preserved that on the record. Quite obviously the Court’s reason for excusing the juror number 16 has no basis in her race.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I am not suggesting that. I just wanted to make a record.
Because defense counsel clearly observed that both Ronald Porter and Juror No. 16 were black, it is reasonable to infer that if either of the two remaining African-American venirepersons were struck from the panel, defense counsel would have made a similar reference. Together with the fact that the government did not use all of its peremptory challenges, these circumstances clearly suggest the absence of discriminatory intent.
The judgment of the district court is AfFIRMED.
