Currently pending before the Court are the motions to dismiss the indictments in the captioned cases for sex discrimination in the selection of grand jury forepersons and grand jury members. The Court has had the benefit of memoranda filed on behalf of the parties, as well as oral argument presented at a consolidated hearing on April 15, 1983. For the reasons hereinafter set forth, these motions will be denied.
*1271 The captioned three suits have been consolidated for the purposes of these motions. In Criminal No. B-82-00241, the indictment charges defendant James J. Donohue, III, with four counts of filing a false income tax return, one count of obstruction of justice, and two counts of influencing a witness, as well as aiding and abetting. In the second suit, Criminal No. R-82-00503, the one-count indictment charges the three defendants, Peter D. Boas, Timothy Fuller, and Alfred Kincaid, with conspiracy to import marijuana. The indictment in Criminal No. K-82-00510, charges each of the three defendants, Rev. Fred E. Snowden, John C. Boatwright, Sr., and Calvin D. Boatwright, with eight counts of mail fraud and aiding and abetting. Defendant Snowden is charged with an additional three counts of tax evasion.
MOTION TO DISMISS THE INDICTMENTS FOR SEX DISCRIMINATION IN THE SELECTION OF GRAND JURY FOREPERSONS
Initially, the Court will address motions to dismiss the indictments for sex discrimination in the selection of grand jury forepersons. The gravamen of these motions is that the jury selection plan for the District of Maryland contains no provision for the method or criteria for selection of the grand jury foreperson. Defendants contend that the jury selection plan is only ostensibly in compliance with the Jury Selection and Service Act of 1968, 28 U.S.C. § 1861 et seq., (“the Act”), because selection of the grand jury foreperson and deputy foreperson is the decision of the judge designated as grand jury judge, and no objective criteria have been articulated to guide his decision. Defendants further contend that the method of selection is thus wholly subjective, with the resulting exclusion from service as grand jury foreperson persons of lower economic positions, blue collar workers, blacks, women, and other cognizable groups. This exclusion allegedly has deprived defendants of their fifth amendment rights under the Due Process clause and of their sixth amendment rights to an impartial jury. In addition, defendants allege violation of the Act.
On August 2, 1982, and January 7, 1983, Orders were signed in Criminal Nos. B-82-00241 and R-82-00503, making available to counsel for defendants the contents of all papers, records, or other relevant material used by the Jury Commissioner or Clerk in connection with the selection process for grand jury foremen and deputy foremen. Counsel forwarded the results of the inspection and/or copying to defendants’ expert witness. Based on the expert’s statistical analysis, 1 defendants pressed their motion only as to sex discrimination.
Defendants’ argument that discrimination in the selection of the grand jury foreperson has a constitutional significance rests on the United States Supreme Court’s decision in
Rose v. Mitchell,
Subsequent to the
Mitchell
decision, and while the consolidated motions here were pending, the Fourth Circuit addressed a motion to dismiss an indictment based on discrimination in the selection of a federal grand jury foreperson, rather than a state grand jury foreperson.
See United States v. Hobby,
Despite the Fourth Circuit’s recent, timely decision, defendants urge consideration of an affidavit executed by a professor of social psychology. (Affidavit of John Lamberth, Associate Professor of Psychology at Temple University, filed with the Court on April 15, 1983, Criminal No. R-82-00503). Although, due to the secrecy rule, the professor concedes that there are no published studies in which grand jury group dynamics were observed directly, he asserts that the United States Supreme Court has made use of the findings of experimental and simulation studies of group dynamics. The professor’s conclusions are based on literature of small group dynamics and decision-making and his own research with mock petit jurors. He suggests that because the foreperson is appointed by the court, the power associated with the court is vested in him or her. Thus, influence of the foreperson is equivalent to that of three to five other grand jurors.
In addition, Professor Lamberth states that he has surveyed the duties of grand jury forepersons in this district. 2 This survey led him to conclude that
*1273 [t]o act as a chairman, to have the authority to excuse jurors, and to have access to the notes of each grand juror means that the individual presides and is in a position of knowing individual jurors [sic] views and opinions before deliberations begin. Because the foreperson in the District of Maryland is granted these additional, significant, powers that even go beyond those of most small group leaders he or she is far more than a functionary and has much greater influence than the one vote he or she casts and even beyond the influence explained ... above. (Lamberth affidavit, at 4).
This Court is unable to accept an argument that if this conclusion had been available to the Fourth Circuit, the appellate court would have rendered a different decision. This Court must assume that the Fourth Circuit is aware that the federal grand jury foreperson is assigned at least some of the duties assigned in this district. Indeed, most of these special duties can only be described as ministerial. They are not comparable to the duties of the foreperson of the Tennessee grand jury who assists in investigating crime and orders the issuance of subpoenae to witnesses. An argument that the foreperson in this district actually derives power from having access to the notes of the other grand jurors is merely speculative.
Also speculative is Professor Lamberth’s contention that the federal grand jury operates in the manner suggested from study of mock, petit jurors and literature of small group dynamics and small group decision-making. It is probable, however, that the studies of petit jurors are only marginally relevant, since the grand jury is significantly larger. The grand jury may not even qualify as a “small group.” Furthermore, the dynamics of the federal grand jury may remain a mystery due to Rule 6(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and its underlying policy promoting secrecy.
This Court is not the first to reject an expert opinion that a federal grand jury foreperson selected by a judge exerts more influence during deliberations than the average grand juror.
See United States v. Abell,
This Court agrees with the Breland court’s assessment of the expert testimony. Accordingly, the Court holds that it must adhere to the recent Fourth Circuit decision, and defendants’ motions to dismiss the indictments for sex discrimination in the selection of the grand jury forepersons will be denied. 3
MOTIONS TO DISMISS THE INDICTMENTS FOR SEX DISCRIMINATION IN SELECTION OF GRAND JURY MEMBERS
Defendants move to dismiss the indictments on a second basis. They contend that there has been a pattern and practice occurring since at least 1973 of discrimination against women in the selection of grand jury members. The resulting under-representation of women on the grand jury in this district allegedly violated the sixth amendment, Equal Protection clause as implied in the Due Process clause of the fifth amendment, and the Jury Selection and Service Act of 1968, 28 U.S.C. § 1861 et seq.
Applicable Legal Standards
The fair cross-section requirement of the sixth amendment has been regarded as an essential element in a system of checks and balances: one articulated function of the jury is to provide a check against an “overzealous or mistaken prosecutor” or the “overconditioned or biased response of a judge.”
Taylor v. Louisiana,
Community participation in the administration of the criminal law, moreover, is not only consistent with our democratic heritage but is also critical to public confidence in the fairness of the criminal justice system. Restricting jury service to only special groups or excluding identifiable segments playing major roles in the community cannot be squared with the constitutional concept of jury trial. “Trial by jury presupposes a jury drawn from a pool broadly representative of the community as well as impartial in a specific case____ [T]he broad representative character of the jury should be maintained, partly as assurance of a diffused impartiality and partly because sharing in the administration of justice is a phase of civic responsibility.” Thiel v. Southern Pacific Co.,328 U.S. 217 , 227 [66 S.Ct. 984 , 989,90 L.Ed. 1181 ] (Frankfurter, J. dissenting).
Id.
[i]t is the policy of the United States that all litigants in Federal courts entitled to trial by jury shall have the right to ... grand and petit juries selected at random from a fair cross section of the community in the district or division wherein the court convenes.
28 U.S.C. § 1861 (in pertinent part).
The elements of a prima facie violation of the fair cross section requirement are well-settled.
See Duren v. Missouri,
(1) that the group alleged to be excluded is a “distinctive” group in the community; (2) that the representation of this group in venires from which juries are selected is not fair and reasonable in relation to the number of such persons in the community; and (3) that this under-representation is due to systematic exclusion of the group in the jury-selection process.
The policies underlying the Equal Protection guarantee against discrimination in selection of grand jurors are also fundamental.
See Rose v. Mitchell,
Discrimination on the basis of race, odious in all aspects, is especially pernicious in the administration of justice. Selection of members of a grand jury because they are of one race and not another destroys the appearance of justice and thereby casts doubt on the integrity of the judicial process. The exclusion from grand jury service of Negroes, or any group otherwise qualified to serve, impairs the confidence of the public in the administration of justice. As this Court repeatedly has emphasized, such discrimination “not only violates our Constitution and the laws enacted under it but is at war with our basic concepts of a democratic society and a representative government.” The harm is not only to the accused, indicted as he is by a jury from which a segment of the community has been excluded. It is to society as a whole. “The injury is not limited to the defendant — there is injury to the jury system, to the law as an institution, to the community at large, and to the democratic ideal reflected in the processes of our courts.”
Id.
(citations omitted). The equal protection and fair cross-section guarantees touch upon values so fundamental that when a defendant has proven a violation, he is entitled to the reversal of a conviction without a showing of actual prejudice to him.
Id.
at 556,
The elements of a prima facie case of violation of the Equal Protection Clause in the selection of the grand jury are also well-settled:
The first step is to establish that the group is one that is a recognizable, distinct class, singled out for different treatment under the laws, as written or applied____ Next, the degree of under-representation must be proved, by comparing the proportion of the group in the total population to the proportion called to serve as grand jurors, over a significant period of time____ Finally, as noted above, a selection procedure that is susceptible of abuse or is not racially neutral supports the presumption of discrimination raised by the statistical showing____ Once the defendant has shown substantial underrepresentation of his group, he has made a prima facie case of discriminatory purpose, and the burden then shifts to the State to rebut the case.
Folston v. Allsbrook,
*1276
“There is a significant distinction, however, in the way that each prima facie case may be rebutted.”
United States v. Perez-Hernandez, supra.
An Equal Protection claim may be rebutted by a showing of the absence of discriminatory intent.
Id.,
citing
Casteneda v. Partida,
It is beyond dispute that women comprise a cognizable group for the purposes of the first element of the prima facie cases for violations of either the sixth amendment or Equal Protection Clause.
See, e.g., Duren v. Missouri, supra; Taylor v. Louisiana, supra; Bryant v. Wainwright,
On the other hand, the statistical showing necessary to establish the second element of either prima facie case has not been well-defined by most courts. Generally, the courts have preferred to avoid a mechanical approach.
Bryant v. Wainwright, supra.
Frequently cited, however, is the Supreme Court’s decision in
Swain v. Alabama,
Thus, a showing of a 13% absolute disparity has been termed “ ‘razor thin’ ” and “ ‘may be easily rebutted.’ ”
United States v. Breland, supra,
at 479 (black grand jury forepersons), quoting
United States ex rel. Barksdale v. Blackburn,
The Fourth Circuit recently took the opportunity to define “substantial disparity” and articulate the standards for a statisti
*1277
cal showing.
See Moultrie v. Martin, supra.
The
Moultrie
petitioner, a black who had been convicted of murder, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus alleging that blacks were underrepresented on the Colleton County, South Carolina grand jury, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. After the district court had denied the petition, the Fourth Circuit examined the grand jury statistics for a seven-year period, 1971 through 1977. The South Carolina jury selection scheme permitted jury commissioners to grant exemptions to potential jurors whose names had been obtained from voting lists. The system had resulted in 31 black grand jurors out of a total of 126. The court noted that in 1977 the county voting roles were 38% black. Petitioner did not provide comparable statistics for other years, a significant omission.
The
Moultrie
court next rejected petitioner’s methodology. Petitioner had compared the percentage of blacks on the grand jury with the percentage of blacks in the total population (to obtain an absolute disparity) which showed an average under-representation of 227° over the seven-year period.
Id.
at 1081-82. First, the court held that the correct comparison was with the voting lists, not the total population, because the grand jury list was based on the voting lists. Second, the court held that comparison of straight percentages (absolute disparity) was incorrect, although the Supreme Court had done so in
Castaneda.
The Fourth Circuit found significant a footnote in that Supreme Court decision,
Application of its newly adopted methodology led to the court’s holding that Moultrie had not made out a prima facie case. Id. at 1085. For the entire seven-year period the court computed a standard deviation of 2.9. It then deleted statistics for the earlier year, 1971, because they were considerably different from those for other years. It thus obtained an average standard deviation of 2.0. It noted that in two years since 1971 the standard deviations showed a slight overrepresentation of blacks. After finding that the standard deviation for the latest six years would not be significant to a social scientist, the court isolated the year 1977, when the petitioner was indicted. The standard deviation for that year was 1.8. Id. at 1084. The borderline nature of the standard deviation figures for either the six or seven year periods led the appellate court to consider the jury commissioners’ testimony that they had exempted more whites than blacks. After criticizing the petitioner’s failure to provide statistics on exemptions for whites and blacks, the Fourth Circuit labeled petitioner’s showing “marginal,” upholding the denial of the petition for writ of habeas corpus. Id. at 1085. 4
*1278 Standing
The Fourth Circuit recently clarified not only the methodology appropriate for a statistical showing, but also the standing requirement. In
Folston v. Allsbrook, supra,
at 185-86, apparently alleging denial of Equal Protection, a white male sought a writ of habeas corpus due to an underrepresentation of women on the grand jury. The court agreed that Folston had standing.
It is likewise clear that a plaintiff may assert underrepresentation of a group on the jury list, although there was no such underrepresentation on his jury. Writing for a three-judge district court panel, Judge Kaufman (now chief judge of this district) quoted Judge Learned Hand’s opinion in
United States v. Dennis,
“ * * * [W]e will assume that any party to a suit, civil or criminal, is entitled to have the particular panel which tries his case, drawn at random from a list which is not unlawfully weighted, and that he may complain even though he has not shown that the imbalance has prejudiced him. The question therefore becomes whether the grand panel and the petit panel which respectively found the indictment and tried the case were drawn from an unlawful list.”
This, wrote Judge Hand (at 216) was true even though the individual jury “ * * * taken by itself * * * was unexceptionable.”
United States v. Cohen,
Based on the case law, there is no dispute that the defendants here have standing. 5
The Prima Facie Case
Because it is well-established that women are a cognizable group, see Duren v. Missouri, supra, the Court will focus on the second element of the prima facie case, the statistical showing. Defendants’ expert, James Fennessey, Senior Associate of Chesapeake Management Support Systems, examined 70 grand juries that operated in the years 1973 to 1982, as well as the 1980 Presidential election figures. He found that women comprised 48.8% of the grand jurors and 52.4% of the registered voters. These figures resulted in a standard deviation of -2.826, with the probability of such a score occurring by chance of one in 400.
At the consolidated hearing on April 15, 1983, the data was updated to include figures from all 84 grand juries sitting between March 1973 and September 1982. During that period there were 943 female and 989 male grand jurors. The relevant standard deviation was -3.298 with a probability of chance occurrence of one in 2000. 6 The Government agreed that these numbers are correct, without conceding that they establish the requisite showing.
While these figures ostensibly appear significant, the Court questions their credibility on a number of bases. As mandated by
Moultrie,
Furthermore, defendants’ expert concedes an “error rate” of approximately 6% in the estimates for registered voters, a term “not well-defined by statistical convention.” The expert’s calculation that approximately 52% of the registered voters are female therefore contains an implicit margin of error, since it was derived from comparing the flawed estimate of the number of registered voters of both sexes in Maryland with the 1980 census figures.
Also questionable is the defendants’ choice of period to examine. All defendants were indicted in 1982. A less arbitrary choice of period might have been the year from September 1981 to September 1982 or the period from early 1981 to September 1982, reflecting use of the 1980 election figures in formation of the jury list. Unlike the Moultrie sample which involved only 126 grand jurors over a seven-year period, id. at 1080, defendants’ sample contains figures for approximately ten years, totalling 1932 grand jurors. Clearly, examination of figures for even a one-year period would not entail special methodology for small samples, defined as 30 to 40 in Moultrie. Id. at 1083 nn. 7, 10. In that case the Fourth Circuit examined the figures for the year that petitioner was indicted, despite the small size of the sample, noting that the standard deviation for that year was not significant. Id. at 1084-85. Here, defendants’ choice of the 1973 through 1982 period seems particularly inappropriate.
Because of defendants’ arbitrary choice of period and defective comparison using 1980 estimated registered voters figures, the Court holds that they have not made the requisite statistical showing. The Court notes that the cases in which the showing has been made, described above, involved striking absolute disparities. If defendants’ figures were to be accepted here, the Court could compare 52% women on the voting lists and 48% women on the grand juries, an absolute disparity of only 4%. This disparity translates into a difference of less than one grand juror on each grand jury. This Court is aware, however, that in Moultrie the Fourth Circuit dictated use of a standard deviation analysis. Id. at 1082-83. A standard deviation of -3.298 would be significant to a social scientist. Id. at 1084. Even if that standard deviation, as determined here by defendants’ expert, were significant to a social scientist, it is not significant to this Court for the aforementioned reasons.
The Court’s conclusion is buttressed by examination of the jury selection plan for this district. This plan provides for random selection of jurors from voter registration lists based on the most recent statewide general election or most recent federal general election prior to each drawing. The plan provides for proportional representation on the Master Jury Wheel of at least one-half of one percent of the total number of registered voters for each county and Baltimore City, within a minimum of 1,000 names. A random selection from the Master Jury Wheel results in a prospective juror list.
The Clerk sends juror qualification forms to those on this list and may summon those who fail to return the form. A designated judge determines from the returned questionnaires whether a potential juror may be exempted due to his or her occupation or one of seven groups for whom jury service “would entail undue hardship or extreme inconvenience.” The judge may also grant *1280 exemptions to five other categories of people, including those with mental or physical infirmities or those not proficient -in the English language. After the judge. has granted exemptions, the Clerk maintains the Qualified Jury Wheel.
The plan establishes four terms of court in each 12 months. Regular grand juries serve one term, while the term of special grand juries is determined by the designated judge but is not to exceed 18 months. Prior to each term, the Clerk randomly selects jurors for service from the Qualified Jury Wheel.
The plan also provides for temporary excuses for “undue hardship or extreme inconvenience,” as well as for a maximum requirement of service.
This plan, based on random, proportional selection and clearly-articulated bases for exemption, does not appear especially susceptible to abuse. If the standard deviation of -3.298 can even be considered marginal, the plan used to select the indicting grand juries here manifests no discriminatory intent or unfair and unreasonable underrepresentation of a cognizable group due to systematic exclusion.
For the aforegoing reasons, the Court holds that the defendants have not established a prima facie case for violation of the fifth and sixth amendments or the Jury Selection and Service Act. Accordingly, defendants’ motions to dismiss the indictments for sex discrimination in the selection of the grand jury members will be denied.
A separate order will be entered in this consolidated matter to confirm the rulings contained in this opinion.
Notes
. The expert James Fennessey, Senior Associate of Chesapeake Management Support Systems, first compared the proportion of female grand jury foremen to the proportion of females among the registered voters and found that the actual proportion of females was .160 (8 female forepersons over 50 grand jurors). This analysis indicates a difference, in standard deviation units, of -5.160.
Second, the expert compared the proportion of female grand jury forepersons to the proportion of females actually serving on grand juries and found a difference of -4.612 in standard deviation units.
The expert labeled both of these differences as "quite unmistakeably statistically significant.” (Exhibit to Defendant’s Supplemental Memorandum, Paper 52, filed November 2, 1982 in Criminal No. B-82-00241)
. Professor Lamberth lists the following duties set out in the Handbook for Federal Grand Jurors (dated May, 1980):
a) Presiding Officer of the Grand Jury (p. 9).
b) To receive communications from other grand jurors when they cannot attend (p. 10).
c) To swear witnesses (p. 11).
d) To be the first of the grand jurors to question witnesses (p. 11).
e) To determine whether an interpreter is needed (p. 11).
f) To ask members of the Grand Jury to discuss and vote upon the evidence after all *1273 other persons than Grand Jury members have left the room (p. 13).
g) To keep a record of the number of jurors concurring in the finding of every indictment and to file the record with the Clerk of the Court (p. 13).
h) To report to the Court a "not true bill" immediately if the individual charged is in jail or out on bail so that they may be immediately released (p. 13).
He lists the following duties set out in the Instructions to the Forepersons of Grand Juries:
a) The foreperson is responsible for conducting the meetings of the Grand Jury, for calling the role, for assuring a quorum is present and to exclude unauthorized persons.
b) The foreperson acts like the chairman of a committee, recognizing members for purposes of addressing questions to witnesses.
c) The foreperson has the authority to excuse individual jurors from specific meetings of the Grand Jury.
d) The foreperson signs indictments and responds for the Grand Jury in open court when an indictment is presented.
e) The foreperson has access to the notes of all grand jurors, which are to be kept by the Clerk at the end of each session, and given to the foreperson at the beginning of the next session.
. The motion as filed on behalf of defendant Donohue, Criminal No. B-82-00241, may also be dismissed for lack of standing. A male defendant has no standing to challenge the discriminatory exclusion of women from the position of foreperson when the foreperson of his indicting grand jury was female.
United States v. Phillips,
. The Fourth Circuit held that even if
Folston
had established a prima facie case, the state of North Carolina had rebutted any inference of intentional discrimination because its selection system was random.
See Moultrie
v.
Martin,
. The fact that defendants are all males challenging the underrepresentation of women is irrelevant. Also irrelevant is the fact that the grand jury which indicted Peter D. Boas, Timothy Fuller, and Alfred Kincaid, Criminal No. R-82-00503, was comprised of 16 women and 10 men. A number of juries were involved in the investigations of the other defendants. After adding the numbers of men and women who served on all these grand juries, the Court notes that in the other two cases, the number of men exceeded the number of women by only one grand juror.
. The Clerk’s Office of this Court has provided figures for the 14 most recent grand juries from March 1982 through March 1983. These figures show that 52.55% out of 411 grand jurors were female and 47.44% were male.
