OPINION
Rоbert Kimbrel challenges his convictions and sentence for two fírearms-related crimes on several grounds, including a Batson challenge. We vacate and remand for a new trial.
I.
Memphis police officers stopped Kimbrel for driving a car with expired registration tags. After discovering marijuana in the car, the officers arrested Kimbrel, and while conducting a safety sweep of the vehicle they discovered a semiautomatic pistol with obliterated serial numbers. A federal grand jury indicted Kimbrel for being a felon in possession of a firearm, see 18 U.S.C. § 922(g), and for possession of a firearm with obliterated serial numbers, see id. § 922(k).
During
voir dire,
defense counsel exercised peremptory strikes against sеveral potential jurors, all but one of whom were white. When defense counsel moved to strike another white juror, Lori Anne Goetz, the government raised an objection under
Batson v. Kentucky,
II.
A.
Kimbrel challenges his convictions on several grounds, but one of them — his sufficiency-of-the-evidence claim — deserves
*465
consideration before the others. If he is right about that, nothing else (in this case) matters because the Double Jeopardy Clause would bar re-prosecution.
See Joseph v. Coyle,
While sufficienсy challenges receive priority treatment, they do not receive easy treatment. A defendant mounting a sufficiency challenge bears a “heavy burden,”
United States v. Vannerson,
Kimbrel cannot shoulder this burden. He challenges both firearm-possession convictions on the same ground: that he never possessed the gun. Two piecеs of evidence undermine that contention. David Pritchard, a prosecuting attorney who met with Kimbrel and his counsel in a proffer session, testified that after signing a proffer letter acknowledging that his statements could be used against him at trial, Kimbrel admitted he had possessed a firearm in March 2003 while a convictеd felon. And one of the Memphis police officers involved in Kimbrel’s arrest, Officer Charles Teeters, testified that while he was sitting in his squad car — with Kimbrel sitting behind him in the back seat — he saw his partner, Officer Charles Smith, recover a handgun while kneeling near the driver’s seat of Kimbrel’s car.
Nor, contrary to Kimbrel’s contention, doеs this amount merely to “tenuous circumstantial evidence” that does not suffice to prove that he possessed the gun. Br. at 45. In the first place, Kimbrel’s own admission that he possessed a gun at that time is not tenuous or circumstantial. In the second place, the government may indeed prove possession оf a firearm by circumstantial evidence, which is why we will not overturn a felon-in-possession-of-a-firearm conviction “merely because [the jury] had to draw reasonable inferences to find [the defendant] guilty.”
United States v. Arnold,
B.
Kimbrel next argues that the district court applied the wrong legal standard in sustaining the government’s
Bat-son
objection to one of his peremptory challenges. Because this argument concerns an alleged mistake of law, it makes no difference whether we review this
Bat-son
challenge for clear error, as we have sometimes said,
see United States v. Copeland,
Batson
applies to peremptory challenges based on race or gender.
See United States v. Mahan,
The same three-step inquiry governs challenges to peremptory strikes in each setting.
See Mahan,
In addressing (and reviewing) a
Batson
challenge, two points deserve emphasis. Although the burden of
'production
switches after step one and again after step two, “the ultimate burden of
persuasion
regarding racial motivation rests with, and never shifts from, the opponent of the strike.”
Purkett v. Elem,
Two cases illustrate these principles. In
Purkett,
the Supreme Court held that the trial court cannot inquire at step two — where the proponent’s burden is merely to provide a facially valid explanation — whether the tendered explanation is “plausible” or even “minimally persuasive.”
See
In
McFerron,
after the government opposed McFerron’s peremptory strike and established its рrima facie case, the district court evaluated McFerron’s proffered explanations for striking each of the five prospective jurors at issue.
See
The district court’s handling of the government’s Batson challenge in this case is reminiscent of Purkett and McFer-ron. After the government objected to Kimbrel’s peremptory strike of Goetz and advanced a prima facie case for discrimination, the court moved to step two and asked defense counsel to provide а nondiscriminatory explanation. During the ensuing colloquy with the court, Kimbrel’s counsel proceeded to articulate his race-neutral reason for the strike, explaining that he “detected a bit of ego there that [he] thought might color her role as a juror,” as Goetz had seemed “too assured and tоo comfortable and too confident” and left the impression that “she was relishing a little bit too much the possibility of being in the court.” JA 215-16. After the district court pressed counsel for some further explanation, see JA 215 (“You sure you don’t have another [explanation]? I would be glad to hear another one.”), it turned to the government for a response. The government contested defense counsel’s assertion that Goetz had displayed “ego” or any similar attribute that “would somehow affect her role as a juror.” JA 216-17. Kimbrel’s counsel rejoined that the decision to strike was “just a gut call” based on a perception thаt “there might be something there that would tend to be very powerful in the jury.” JA 217.
The district court then analyzed the government’s objection. After finding that the government had established a pri-ma facie case of purposeful discrimination, the court determined that Kimbrel had failed to satisfy his burden of persuasion. The court еxpressed doubt about defense counsel’s proffered reason, noting that Goetz’s disclosure of her indirect connection to another case before the court did not justify the strike, and explaining that “[t]he thing that distinguishes this lady is her race.” JA 219. The court thus not only conflated steps two and three of the Batson anаlysis — assessing the persuasiveness of Kimbrel’s proffered explanation without first acknowledging that he had come forward with a race-neutral justification — but it also explicitly indicated that Kimbrel, the proponent of the strike, bore the burden of persuasion. See id. (concluding that “the party with the burden of persuasiоn regarding a nondiscriminatory basis has failed in this particular situation” and thus sustaining the government’s Bat-son objection). If these types of errors required reversal in Purkett and McFer-ron, they require reversal here.
In defending the district court’s ruling, the government argues that Kimbrel never produced a race-neutral explanation for the strike. Not true. As the Supreme Court and this court have explained, the reason offered must be “clear and reasonably specific,”
Batson,
Whether the race-neutral reasons offered by Kimbrel’s counsel — his sense that Goetz had “a bit of ego,” JA 216, and “was relishing a little bit too much the possibility of being in the court,” JA 215— would have satisfied step three of the
Bat-son
inquiry need not detain us. The point is that they sufficed at the second step: The offered reasons were related to the case, were reasonably clear and did not simply disclaim discriminatory intent.
Cf. McFerron,
Attempting to distinguish
McFerron,
the government argues that the district court in that case truly stopped at
Batson’s
second step, whereas in this case the court, “despite [its] facial misstatement of law,” ultimately did engage in the balancing analysis required by
Batson’s
third step, weighing defense counsel’s credibility against the evidence of discrimination. Br. at 24. But this gloss on the proceedings emanates from something other than the record. Based on what the court said, it rejected Kimbrel’s race-neutral explanations at step two of the process. This thus is not a case where, despite the district court’s “less than ideal” aрplication of
Bat-son,
it ultimately did engage in each of the required steps.
Paschal,
At oral argument, the government suggested that even if the district court misapplied
Batson,
this court can determine for itself whethеr the government satisfied its ultimate burden of persuasion. But when faced with a nearly identical situation in
McFerron,
we did not follow that course.
See
The government argues that even if the district court erred by placing the burden of persuasion on Kimbrel instead of on the prosecution, any error was
*469
harmless.
See
Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(a). Not all errors, however, are suscеptible to harmless-error review. Only “trial error[s]” — that is, errors “which occurred during the presentation of the case to the jury, and which may therefore be quantitatively assessed in the context of other evidence presented in order to determine whether its admission was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” — are appropriately subject to harmless-error review.
Arizona v. Fulminante,
Contrary to the government’s suggestion,
United States v. Martinez-Salazar,
That brings us to the question of remedy, a point about which the parties have had little to say. So far as the government has been concerned, the sole question before us is whether the district court conducted a proper
Batson
inquiry, as guided by our decision in
McFerron.
In
McFerron,
once the court determined that a
Batson
violation had occurred, it reversed the cоnviction and sent the case back for a new trial.
See
III.
For these reasons, while sufficient evidence supported the convictions, we vacate the convictions and sentence on the ground that the district court conducted a flawed Batson analysis. Kimbrel is entitled to a new trial.
