Today we decide a district court need not and may not take into account Hispanics who are ineligible for jury service to determine whether Hispanics are underrepresented on grand jury venires. To establish a prima facie violation of the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee that grand juries reflect a fair cross-section of the community, a defendant must prove in part “that the representation of [an allegedly underrepresented] group in venires from which juries are selected is not fair and reasonable in relation to the number of such persons in the community.”
Duren v. Missouri,
I. Background
On February 7, 2005, after a jury trial, the district court sentenced Jose Antonio Torres-Hernandez to fifty-one months’ imprisonment and three years’ supervised release for being a deported alien within the United States, in violation of 8 U.S.C. § 1326. Torres-Hernandez had previously been deported on October 5,1996.
Before his trial, Torres-Hernandez moved to dismiss his indictment. He argued that, in violation of the Sixth Amendment, the systematic exclusion of Hispanics in Southern District of California grand jury venires had resulted in a grand jury that did not represent a fair cross-section of the community.
To support his motion, Torres-Hernandez presented the expert opinion and statistical analysis of Dr. John R. Weeks. Weeks prepared evidence that the overall population of the Southern District of California, composed of San Diego and Imperial Counties, is 28.9 percent Hispanic. Weeks also found that, of individuals in the district “age eligible” for jury service, 24.8 percent were Hispanic. Finally, Weeks calculated that “jury-eligible” Hispanic individuals comprised 16.1 percent of the district’s jury-eligible population. 1
Weeks compared this data to the percentage of Hispanics on Torres-Hernandez’s grand jury venire — 14.1 percent — to determine whether Hispanics were fairly represented. Weeks subtracted the percentage of Hispanics on Torres-Hernandez’s grand jury venire from the general, age-eligible-, and jury-eligible percentages described above to arrive at various “absolute disparities”: 14.8, 10.7, and 2.0 percentage points respectively. 2 Weeks then divided the absolute disparity corresponding to the jury-eligible Hispanic population (2.0 percent) by the percentage of jury-eligible individuals who are Hispanic (16.1 percent) to arrive at a “relative disparity” of 12.1 percent. 3
After Torres-Hernandez was convicted for being a deported alien inside the country, 4 the district court denied his motion to dismiss his indictment because it ruled that Hispanics were fairly represented on *703 his grand jury venire. 5 First, the district court found that the Ninth Circuit favors the absolute disparity test, not the relative disparity test, to measure the representativeness of a distinctive group on jury veni-res. Second, the district court implicitly found that, to determine whether Hispanics were underrepresented on Torres-Hernandez’s grand jury, it must compare the percentage of Hispanics on Torres-Hernandez’s grand jury to the percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics in the district. Because the absolute disparity between the percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics and the percentage of Hispanics on Torres-Hernandez’s grand jury venire was only 2.0 percentage points, the district court held that Torres-Hernandez did not establish a prima facie violation of the Sixth Amendment’s fair cross-section requirement.
Torres-Hernandez timely appealed to this court.
II. Analysis
A. Sixth Amendment Fair Cross-Section Claim
We review
de novo
a Sixth Amendment challenge to the composition of a grand jury.
See United States v. Rodriguez-Lara,
The Supreme Court in
Duren
established that grand juries do not represent a fair cross-section of the community when the jury-selection process systematically excludes a distinctive group of the jury-eligible population.
In order to establish a prima facie violation of the fair-cross-section requirement, the defendant must show (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 underrepre-sentation is due to systematic exclusion of the group in the jury-selection process.
Id.
at 364,
The second prong of the Duren test requires proof, typically statistical data, that the jury pool does not adequately represent the distinctive group in relation to the number of such persons in the community. We have been confronted with this issue before and have favored the “absolute disparity” test for measuring the representativeness of a distinctive group in a jury pool.
United States v. Esquivel,
Our precedents agree that to prove Hispanics are underrepresented in a givén district’s jury pools, the ultimate basis for comparison is the district’s actual percent
*704
age of jury eligible Hispanics.
See id.
at 727 (relying on the government’s statistical data, which excluded minors and non-citizens, to find that the absolute disparity was inadequate to satisfy
Duren’s
second element, because such data more accurately reflected the actual percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics than did the defendant’s general population data);
Rodriguez-Lara,
At the same time, our cases conflict as to whether a defendant who presents only evidence that includes non-jury-eligible segments of the population may ever satisfy a prima facie case. In
United States v. Artero,
We need not make a
sua sponte
en banc call in this case to resolve the intra-circuit conflict because the district court here had jury-eligible statistical data that satisfied both the higher evidentiary burden of
Artero
and, necessarily, the lesser burden of
Rodriguez-Lara. See United States v. Whitehead,
We resolve this case under the principle explained in Esquivel: When presented with various types of data to determine whether Hispanics are underrepresented on grand jury venires, a court must rely on the statistical data that best approximates the percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics in the district.
In
Esquivel,
we did not need to decide whether the defendant had established a prima facie case with general population data because we had before us data that better approximated the actual percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics in the district.
Just as we did in Esquivel, in deciding the absolute disparity of Hispanics was constitutionally insignificant in the present case, the district court here relied on the most refined data it had. Although Torres-Hernandez’s witness Weeks prepared evidence that Hispanics compose 28.9 percent of the general population and 24.8 percent of the age-eligible population, he also prepared evidence that only 16.1 percent of the jury-eligible population was Hispanic. 8 , 9 The district court correctly found that a 2.0 percentage points absolute disparity between the percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics and the percentage *706 of Hispanics on Torres-Hernandez’s grand jury venire was constitutionally insignificant. See id. (holding that a. 4.9 percentage points absolute disparity was constitutionally insignificant). Therefore, the district court correctly denied Torres-Hernandez’s motion to dismiss his indictment based on a violation of the Sixth Amendment’s fair cross-section requirement.
B. Other Constitutional Claims
Torres-Hernandez’s other claims clearly fail under controlling precedent.
Torres-Hernandez claims that a CNR was “testimonial” within the meaning of
Crawford
and its admission into evidence therefore violated his Sixth Amendment Confrontation Clause rights. However, we recently rejected just such a claim.
See United States v. Cervantes-Flores,
The district court also did not violate Torres-Hernandez’s Sixth Amendment rights by sentencing him above the applicable statutory maximum based on its finding of a prior conviction, without a finding of such prior conviction by a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
Finally, Torres-Hernandez argues that the district court violated Fifth Amendment retroactivity principles by considering the Sentencing Guidelines advisory, pursuant to the remedial holding in
United States v. Booker,
III. Conclusion
We AFFIRM Torres-Hernandez’s conviction and sentence.
Notes
. To be “jury eligible,” an individual must be a United States citizen, at least eighteen years old, have resided for at least one year within the judicial district, and be able to speak English. 28 U.S.C. § 1865(b)(1) & (3). The individual must also be able to read, write, and understand the English language with a degree of proficiency sufficient to fill out satisfactorily the juror qualification form. Id. § 1865(b)(2).
. "We determine absolute disparity by taking the percentage of the group at issue in the total population and subtracting from it the percentage of that group that is represented on the master jury wheel.”
United States v. Sanchez-Lopez,
. "Comparative disparity is determined by taking the absolute disparity percentage and dividing that number by the percentage of the group in the total population.”
Sanchez-Lopez,
The percentages in this opinion are rounded to the nearest tenth of a percentage point. When the relevant percentages are not rounded, the relative disparity of 12.1 percent is the correct quotient.
. Although Torres-Hernandez had filed the motion to dismiss his indictment on account of the purported Sixth Amendment violation before his trial, the district judge did not rule on the motion until after Torres-Hernandez had been convicted.
. Before trial, the district court denied Torres-Hernandez’s motion to suppress the' admission of a certificate of nonexistence of record (CNR) — a document establishing that an alien has not been granted permission to enter the country — as a violation of the Sixth Amendment's Confrontation Clause under
Crawford v. Washington,
. Torres-Hernandez satisfies
Duren’s
first element because Hispanics constitute a distinctive group in the community.
See United States v. Esquivel,
. Being "age-eligible” means being eighteen years of age or older, which is also a necessary element for being "jury-eligible.”
See Rodriguez-Lara,
. That Torres-Hernandez, rather than the government, proffered the most refined set of data is unimportant. We are mindful that future defendants may decide to withhold unfavorable jury-eligible data so as to not trump their own general population or age-eligible data. As mentioned above, it is not clear at this time whether less refined data can satisfy a prima facie case when more refined data is available, but not proffered. We reiterate our admonition in
Esquivel
that a defendant may not "selectively include data which supports her position, while ignoring census data which ... also bears on the issue of disparity.”
Esquivel,
. This court in Artero cited a possible reason for the substantial drop of Hispanics in the jury-eligible population of the Southern District of California:
The able district judges in the Southern District were cognizant that the district, consisting of two counties on the border with Mexico, would likely have many Hispanic residents who had not yet attained citizenship or English proficiency, because they had only recently come to the United States to seek better work to support themselves and their families. As a matter of common sense, the percentage of Hispanics eligible for federal jury service in those two counties was likely to be lower than the ratio for the general population.
Statistical data that excludes populations such as under-age, non-citizen, and non-English-speaking Hispanics will tend more accurately to approximate the actual percentage of juiy-eligible Hispanics than less refined, or general population, data. However, it is conceivable that a particular set of jury-eligible data could have such a large margin of error, due to an expert's flawed methodology or other factors, that other data before the court would more accurately reflect the actual percentage of jury-eligible Hispanics in a district. If such a case were to arise, a district court would have to weigh experts’ competing evidence, including the experts' qualifications, biases, motives, methodologies, and all other elements used to weigh expert testimony, to determine which data set was most accurate. We would review a district court’s finding for clear error.
Cf. Paige v. California,
