The defendant, Earlie Brown, Jr., challenges the district court’s decision to allow a peremptory challenge against a black woman *571 and to admit into evidence some of Brown’s prior bad acts. We affirm.
I. Background
Brown, along with a coconspirator, attempted to purchаse a kilogram of cocaine from some undercover police officers. In furtherance of the scheme Brown conducted counter-surveillance from across the street and contributed $20,000 of the $23,600 cash used in the attempted drug-buy. When the police simultaneously arrested both Brown and his eoconspirator, Brown’s fingerprints were found on the box containing the drug money. After the arrest a federal grand jury returned a two count indictment (under 21 U.S.C. § 841(a) and § 846) against Brown for his participation in the conspiracy and attempted purchase of сocaine. Two weeks before his jury trial Brown filed a motion in limine, under Fed.R.Evid. 404(b), to keep evidence of his prior drug dealing away from the jury. The district court denied his motion. Later, during the
voir dire,
the prosecutor used a peremptory to challenge a potential juror (“Lumas”) whose race happened to be black. The defendant objected to this peremptory citing
Batson v. Kentucky,
II. Analysis
Brown challenges his conviction arguing that (A) the prosecutor impermissibly used a peremptory strike to dismiss a juror, and (B) the trial court improperly admitted the defendant’s prior bad acts. We shall address these arguments serially.
A. Peremptory Challenge
The Supreme Court has read the fourteenth amendment to forbid the use of peremptory strikes to dismiss рotential jurors on account of race.
Batson,
The record in this matter is silent with respect to any facts supporting a
prima facie Batson
case. Of course' the trial judge could have been merely exercising caution when he requested that the prosecutor givе a neutral explanation for challenging Lumas. In any event, since the parties do not dispute the existence of the
prima facie
case, we shall proceed as if such a burden had been carried.
See United States v. Changco,
To survive
a'Batson
challenge, unlike a challenge for
cause,
a peremptory strike need not be based on a strong or good reason, only founded on a reason other than race or gender.
Batson,
Since Lumas was the only person challenged for familial unemployment, the
*572
defendant might have argued that the prosecutor merely linked the two unemployment characteristics as a pretеxt to exclude a black juror. This argument, however, seeks to establish too much. Defendants may point to nearly any combination of features claiming pretext. While a combination of characteristics may at times combine to eliminate some from the venire who happen to be members of a racial group, standing alone such a result cannot translate into a conclusion that the strike was racially motivated. We note that this circuit has explicitly approved of a prosecutor combining characteristics to strikе jurors, even when challenged under
Batson. See United States v. Hughes,
After the Batson-type arguments, Brown raises two additional, rather novel claims. First he argues that the district judge originally ruled or at least seemed ready to rule in his favor on Lumаs, and then the judge “impermissibly” changed his mind. Brown is emphatic that the judge’s original “ruling” should be given all the deference we can muster, since when he made it he was uniquely positioned to make the Batson assessments described above. Then, Brown says, the judge’s reasons for changing his mind should be examinеd, and if they are bad reasons, his original decision not to allow the strike should be reinstated. Brown’s position apparently rests on a misconception of how judges make decisions and how we review them. Here the judge heard some arguments from both sides, questioned the prosecutor, heard some more arguments, and then decided to allow the peremptory. We cannot freeze the judge’s thinking at some moment during the argument. We review a trial court’s final rulings and judgments, not its first-cut reactions to counsel’s arguments. The recorded reasoning of trial сourts on the many decisions they make need not always be crisp and tidy. What we know is that this court’s conclusion is amply supported by the law and not undercut in any way by any facts or rulings in the record.
We must also reject Brown’s second novel argument. Brown complains that he was aсtually not unemployed, but rather self-employed as a fisherman, card player, and lawn-mower man. As his reasoning goes, since Brown was employed the unemployment of Lumas and her family was not relevant, and thus the prosecutor’s peremptory was impermissible. We do not nеed to settle the extent of Brown’s employment (or underemployment) in evaluating the relevance of a challenged peremptory strike. It is enough, that the offending characteristic of the juror is supported by at least one side’s version of the facts. Additionally a court must be entitled to rely on defense counsel’s remarks at voir dire, which themselves acknowledge that unemployment has some relevance to the case. 1 If the court were to wait until trial to settle the question of Brown’s employment, the information naturally would arrive too late to be of any use in assessing the basis of a strike.
B. Prior Bad Acts
Before trial Brown moved to bar the testimony of four government witnesses, two who would say that Brown bought drugs from them and two who would say that he sold drugs to them. Brown had not been convicted of any crimes in connection with these sales, and wаs not on trial for them here. The testimony was only meant to establish that if he committed the acts with which he *573 was charged, he committed them intentionally, not inadvertently. Brown argues that the testimony does not satisfy this circuit’s rules governing the admissibility of evidence of a defendant’s other crimеs or bad acts — that is, crimes he has committed other than those with which he is now charged. Perhaps sensing again that the overwhelming weight of authority is against him, Brown also asks us to reconsider the circuit’s rules.
Generally, evidence of past bad acts is inadmissible as proof of a dеfendant’s character and propensity to commit crimes; however, under certain conditions prior bad acts may be admitted as proof of an element of a crime, such as intent, if the act demonstrates how the defendant’s behavior was purposeful rather thаn accidental.
See
Fed. R.Evid. 404(b);
United States v. Beasley,
What Brown apparently seeks is for this circuit to abandon its rule and adopt the opposite position — that 404(b) evidence always should be forbidden if a defendant stipulates not to challenge the relevant intent. In support Brown argues that the probative value of the evidence is marginal while the potential for unfair prejudice remains ever present.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). Some other circuits have taken Brown’s position to a greater or lesser extent.
See, e.g., United States v. Jemal,
Brown next argues that the governmеnt’s evidence of past crimes does not satisfy the other general requirements of admissibility. Brown contends that evidence of his past drug deals was merely cumulative. Given that other evidence already established intent, Brown complains that the probative value of evidеnce of his past misdeeds is marginal at best, but meanwhile highly prejudicial. Brown believes that a string of witnesses who say the defendant bought and sold drugs may cause the jury to conclude either that the defendant probably is guilty of at least some crime so they had best convict him, or to supрose the defendant is the sort of person who is predisposed by his prior bad acts to buy drugs. Of course these are forbidden inferences, and upon request the trial court is obliged to so instruct the
*574
jury.
2
See
Fed.R.Evid. 105;
Huddleston v. United States,
In the absence of a categorical rule of the kind Brown urges on us, we must defer to the judgment of the trial court. Trial judges are better positioned than we to assess the likely value аnd probable effects of testimony. We reverse their judgments only if they reflect an abuse of discretion.
United States v. Beasley,
Finally, because his prior drug dealings involved only single buyer seller trаnsactions, Brown argues that these exchanges were not sufficiently similar to the presently-charged, drug conspiracy to survive exclusion under Rule 404(b). Upon examination of this claim we find that Brown has failed to carry his burden of showing clear error in the district court’s judgment that a similarity existеd between Brown’s earlier and current drug activity.
Affirmed.
Notes
. During voir dire Brown’s lawyer asked the members of the panel the following question relating to his client's employment status:
[D]o you think it’s wrong for parent who works to support their adult children? Does anybody think that that automatically raises a question mark in yоur head, well gee, you know, that child, that child of those parents, well he is probably doing something illegal? Does anybody think that, I mean, besides just maybe, you know, other reasons like unemployment or perhaps laziness?
. The trial judge heard all of Brown's arguments before the trial, and ruled thаt the evidence would be admitted accompanied by the limiting instruction. He also said that he would be willing to revisit the question later at counsel's request, after other evidence had come in. We believe that this last proviso was an appropriate example of how, as a matter of course, a court may proceed when considering 404(b) evidence.
