UNITED STATES of America, ex rel. Frank TEAGUE, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Michael P. LANE, Director, Department of Corrections and
Michael O'Leary, Warden, Stateville Correctional
Center, Respondents-Appellees.
No. 84-2474.
United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.
Dec. 30, 1985.
Patricia Unsinn, Chicago, Ill., for petitioner-appellant.
Mark Rotert, Asst. Atty. Gen., Chicago, Ill., for respondents-appellees.
Before CUMMINGS, Chief Judge, and BAUER, WOOD, CUDAHY, POSNER, COFFEY, FLAUM, EASTERBROOK, and RIPPLE, Circuit Judges.
ORDER
This case was argued on April 9, 1985 to a panel consisting of Judges Cudahy and Coffey, together with Senior Circuit Judge John W. Peck of the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation.
Pursuant to Circuit Rule 16(e), the panel opinion in this case was circulated to all the judges of the court in regular active serviсe. A majority of the judges in regular active service have voted to rehear this case en banc, the time of argument to be set at a date convenient to the court.
CUDAHY, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
This case involves the questiоn whether the Constitution prohibits prosecutors from using their peremptory challenges to exclude potential jurors exclusively on the basis of race. The matter was originally heard by a panel consisting of Judge Coffey, Senior Circuit Judge John W. Peck of the Sixth Circuit, sitting by designation, and me. The panel opinion, which I wrote, vacated and remanded on the grounds that the exercise of peremptory challengеs by the prosecutor in this case violated, at least prima facie, the defendant's Sixth Amendment right to an impartial jury. The panel opinion, together with a dissent by Judge Coffey, was then circulated under our Circuit Rulе 16 to the full court, which voted to rehear the matter en banc. I shall briefly outline here the essential content of the opinion of the panel majority to indicate why I believe that en banc review is unnеcessary. Judge Peck has requested that I record his agreement with the views which follow.
Frank Teague, a black, was tried before a jury in an Illinois court and convicted of attempted murder and armed robbеry. Each side had ten peremptory challenges and the state exercised all of its challenges to exclude black jurors. The defense also challenged one black, and there were no blacks on the resulting jury.
The defense moved for a mistrial, arguing that the state was denying Teague a trial by a jury of his peers by excluding potential jurors on the basis of race. These motions were denied. Although, as things now stand, a prosecutor need not defend his peremptory challenges, the state offered two rationales for its actions: that it was attempting to obtain a balance of men and women on the jury аnd that it had excused a number of young people. The Illinois Appellate Court noted that the record did not support the state's explanation but held that under existing law it could place no restrictiоn on a prosecutor's use of his peremptory challenges.
The precise issue raised was whether a defendant's Sixth Amendment rights are violated when a prosecutor uses his peremptory challеnges to exclude members of one race from a petit jury. Such a use is not a violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, so long as the exclusion does not prevent members of a race from ever sitting on juries, "in case after case, whatever the circumstances, whatever the crime, and whoever the defendant or victim may be." Swain v. Alabama,
The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees due process as wеll as equal protection, but at the time Swain was decided it was not yet settled which jury-trial rights were guaranteed by that amendment's due process clause. We now know that the Sixth Amendment applies fully to the statеs through the Fourteenth Amendment, Duncan v. Louisiana,
As Judge Peck and I have viewed it, the question presents a clash between two devices, the peremptory challenge and the requirement of representativeness in the jury pool, both of which are intended to secure an impartial jury and neither of which we wanted to see destroyed. For the most part they do not сonflict, but when they do, one must give way partially so that neither will be destroyed.
The Sixth Amendment guarantees that the jury pool from which a jury is selected must contain a representative cross-section of thе community. Taylor v. Louisiana,
There is no constitutional right to peremptory challenges, Swain,
Judge Peck and I therefore believed that the only option open to the court in these circumstances was to limit the peremptory chаllenge in some way. We did not believe that this mechanism for insuring jury impartiality would be destroyed if abuses of it were made subject to objection. We therefore suggested a limitation that we think would be the least intrusive whilе complying with the demands of the Sixth Amendment. Rather than reduce the number of peremptory challenges, as some have suggested, we sought to limit the prosecutor with a procedure that would screen out only cases of discriminatory abuse. Two circuits have placed such limits on the use of the peremptory challenge to avoid violating the Sixth Amendment. See Booker v. Jabe, supra, and McCray v. Adams, supra. A number of other circuits have done so as an exercise of their supervisory powers. See United States v. Leslie,
According to the procedure adopted by these courts and suggested by Judge Peck and me, the defendant would have to raise a timely objection and make out a prima facie case by showing thаt the persons excluded were members of a cognizable and suspect group and that those challenged were more likely to have been challenged because of the group they belоng to than because of any specific bias. Once the prima facie case was made, it would be up to the prosecutor to rebut it. The appropriate rebuttal would involve bias, of cоurse, because bias is supposed to be the reason for the challenges in the first place. The prosecutor's rationale would not have to be one that would sustain a challenge for cаuse, but it would have to be both race-neutral and supported by the record. This procedure would not prevent the prosecutor from excluding two, or three, or four of a given race; but it would prevent him from either using all of his peremptories to exclude members of a race, or from using his peremptories to systematically exclude all members of a race. All of this would fall short of destroying the pеremptory challenge. The prosecutor would be free to use his challenges as he chose, so long as he did not use them for the impermissible purpose of systematically excluding blacks, or membеrs of one cognizable group, from the petit jury.
For these reasons, which were set forth at length in the proposed panel opinion, I think en banc review unnecessary and I therefore respectfully dissent from the order directing rehearing en banc.
