During jury selection preceding Eric Boyd’s trial for three armed bank robberies, his lawyer exercised a peremptory challenge against the only black member of the venire. Boyd did not protest, the prosecutor did not object, the jury convicted, and the judge sentenced Boyd to 650 months’ imprisonment. At sentencing it became clear that Boyd’s counsel had acted on racial stereotypes. He told the court that he believed that white jurors would defer to a black juror’s judgment about a black defendant, and counsel did not want Boyd’s fate to rest on his ability to convince a single juror. Boyd himself attributed a different stereotype to counsel: Boyd related that counsel told him that middle class blacks should be removed from the jury because they are especially likely to vote to convict lower class blacks accused of violent crime.
Batson v. Kentucky,
“No” is the straightforward answer. A lawyer is the client’s agent. How can Boyd protest his agent’s — which is to say, his own — tactical decision? Many a defendant
*722
would like to plant an error and grow a risk-free trial: an acquittal is irrevocable under the double jeopardy clause, and a conviction can be set aside. But steps the court takes at the defendant’s behest are not reversible, because they are not error; even the “plain error” doctrine does not ride to the rescue when the choice has been made deliberately, and the right in question has been waived rather than forfeited.
United States v. Olano,
Ineffective assistance of counsel would avoid the waiver, because a deficient lawyer’s acts are attributed not to the accused but to the government. See
Cuyler v. Sullivan,
Boyd advances a second reason why the lawyer’s decision is not conclusive. He contends that peremptory challenges are personal rights, which only the defendant may exercise. Counsel is no more authorized to exercise a peremptory challenge without the defendant’s approval than to enter a guilty plea on the defendant’s behalf, or to waive trial by jury over the defendant’s protest, Boyd believes. Now Boyd cannot mean that the defendant alone is entitled to decide whether a black person should be seated; under McCollum race is off limits to defendants and lawyers alike as a ground for peremptory challenges. His argument therefore is universal: the defendant is entitled to make every decision about which jurors to accept and which to challenge — presumably not only the exercise of peremptory challenges, but also which jurors to challenge for cause.
The conclusion does not follow from the premise. Let us suppose that the decision to accept or challenge a juror is the defendant’s, so that the lawyer must consult with the accused concerning each potential juror and abide by the defendant’s wishes. It would not follow that the defendant is entitled to protest for the first time after the trial is over. Consider one choice that belongs to the defendant personally: to testify or remain silent.
See Rock v. Arkansas,
That is not the only problem with Boyd’s position. Its premise is incorrect. Decisions on selection of a jury are among the many entrusted to counsel rather than to defendants personally. When the Supreme Court held in
Johnson v. Zerbst,
The list of “fundamental” choices in
Jones
is similar to the list of subjects on which a judge must obtain a waiver before accepting a guilty plea. Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(c). One thing these choices have in common is a foundation in the Constitution. Constitutional rights are more fundamental than those, such as peremptory challenges, that can be eliminated at the stroke of a pen.
McCollum,
Fundamental choices, which the accused alone can exercise, are the most serious steps in a prosecution — to have counsel or represent oneself; to stand trial or plead guilty; to commit one’s fate to a judge or a jury; to tell one’s story or remain silent. Choices like this are comprehensible to a lay person, and because they are so few (and so *724 vital) it is feasible to require the judge or counsel to inform the defendant about the likely consequences of exercising one option rather than another. Decisions about challenges to jurors are of another order altogether. No one knows in advance how a potential juror will react to the evidence, or how the jurors will interact with each other in the jury room. Even experienced advocates find predictions difficult. The best available study concludes that both prosecutors and defense counsel, in exercising peremptory challenges, are as likely to remove from the jury persons who favor their cause as persons who vote against it. Hans Zeisel & Shari Seidman Diamond, The Effect of Peremptory Challenges on Jury and Verdict: An Experiment in a Federal District Court, 30 Stan. L.Rev. 491 (1978). See also Symposium on the Selection and Function of the Modem Jury, 40 American L.Rev. (Win. 1991). When a subject is so complex that even trained advocates must make shots in the dark, there is little to be said for deeming the question so fundamental that the accused alone must have control.
Three other variables (in addition to the constitutional commitment of the right to the accused, and the profound effects of the choice) are potentially relevant. Because they are implicit in what we have already said, we can be brief. First, rights treated as personal to the accused involve a few choices made once and for all; decisions that come up frequently (such as objections to evidence) are committed to counsel, lest the trial bog down in endless warnings to the accused, followed by private consultation and choices on the record. The decision whether to cross-examine a witness, and on what subjects, therefore is exercised by counsel even though confrontation and cross-examination are among the Constitution’s express guarantees. Second, the more technical the legal rule, the less appropriate it is for the accused to make the choice personally. No one believes that the subtleties of the Federal Rules of Evidence — which often elude capable lawyers — are meet for decision by the defendant. Third, courts consign decisions to counsel when treating them as personal to the accused would create unacceptable opportunities for gaming the system. (This is one point of Underwood.) On all three of these dimensions, decisions about when to challenge potential jurors — and when not to do so — are among the tactical choices committed to counsel.
That particular grounds of decision are forbidden does not change the locus of decision. Attorneys may not consider race and sex when deciding which members of the venire to challenge; but neither may attorneys consider race and sex when deciding which witnesses to cross-examine. An attorney who refuses to cross-examine female witnesses, out of a misguided sense of chivalry, would violate his client’s rights and would not be fit to practice. Still, the possibility of abuse does not mean that the decision may be exercised by the accused alone. So too with peremptory challenges.
Our conclusion that the exercise of a peremptory challenge by the defense, in violation of
Batson
and
McCollum,
does not entitle the defendant to a new trial unless the challenge amounts to ineffective assistance of counsel, places us in respectful disagreement with
United States v. Huey,
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Consider a few parallels. Perjury is forbidden — it is a felony; it may be the basis of an enhanced sentence,
United States v. Dunnigan,
Huey
did not discuss any of these parallel situations. And two of the three members of the panel in
Huey
filed a concurring opinion to remark that its outcome will undermine public trust in the criminal justice system.
Affirmed.
Notes
Because this opinion creates a.conflict among the circuits, it was circulated before release under Circuit Rule 40(e). None of the judges favored a hearing en banc.
