I.
In this appeal, Marvin Jerome Horsley and Earl Howard McDonald challenge their convictions for possession of cocaine with intent to distribute,
see
21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1) (1982), on two grounds. One of the grounds is frivolous
1
and is not worthy of discussion. The other, based on
Batson v. Kentucky,
The appellants, who are black, contend that during the selection of the jury that tried the case, the prosecutor purposefully discriminated against them by peremptorily challenging the only black on the venire. They therefore claim that the district court denied them the equal protection of the *1544 laws as guaranteed by the due process clause of the fifth amendment 2 when it overruled their objection to the seating of the jury.
The jury was selected in the following manner. First the court qualified a venire of thirty-two persons. Only one of the thirty-two veniremen, Clarence Beckham, was black. The court then examined the venire and, when it finished, invited counsel to undertake their own additional examination of the veniremen. The prosecutor declined the invitation; defense counsel accepted it and made a brief inquiry of several veniremen. The court thereafter entertained challenges for cause; none were made.
The parties exercised their peremptory challenges at side bar; the Government had six challenges, and the defendants had ten. The parties presented their challenges — one by one with the Government proceeding first — by addressing the twelve veniremen seated in the jury box; as strikes were made, the challenged venireman was replaced by the next venireman in line (from the twenty not in the box).
The Government struck Clarence Beck-ham with its second peremptory challenge. At this point, the defense expressed concern that appellants were to be tried by an all-white jury and objected to what appeared to be a racially discriminatory use of the peremptory challenge by the prosecutor. Accordingly, defense counsel asked the court to request that the prosecutor give his reasons for exercising his peremptory challenge against Beckham. Since Beckham’s answers to the district court’s questions, during voir dire, did not differ in substance from those provided by white jurors whom the prosecutor did not strike, 3 the court ruled that the defendants were “entitled to something on the record.” The obvious implication of the court’s action is that it inferred from the circumstances that the prosecutor had struck Beckham because he was black in order purposefully to deprive appellants of the possibility of having any blacks impaneled to try the case. The court then requested the prosecutor to set forth a non-racially discriminatory reason for striking the black juror. The prosecutor responded, “I don’t have any particular reason. I just got a feeling about him as I have about Mr. Gonzalez and several others.” 4
*1545
Before swearing in the jury, the district court revisited the defendants’ objection to the striking of Beckham in light of the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Batson v. Kentucky,
II.
In
Batson v. Kentucky,
Initially, we hold that the vague explanation offered by the prosecutor in the instant case was legally insufficient to refute a prima facie case of purposeful racial discrimination. While the reasons given by the prosecutor “need not rise to the level justifying exercise of a challenge for cause,”
see Batson,
As noted above, after the prosecutor failed to articulate a sufficient explanation for striking Beckham, the district court reversed its earlier ruling that the circumstances permitted an inference that the prosecutor had purposely discriminated against the appellants by striking the one juror who was of their same race, or in the vernacular of
Batson,
that the appellants had established a prima facie case of purposeful discrimination. The district court’s action was based on the erroneous belief that a prima facie case of purposeful discrimination under
Batson
could be established only through evidence of a systematic discriminatory use of peremptory challenges. While
Batson
noted that a pattern of strikes against black jurors might be a relevant circumstance to consider, the Court stated that the example was “merely illustrative.”
Id.
at 97,
We therefore vacate the district court’s decision that appellants did not establish a prima facie showing of racial discrimination in the prosecutor’s use of his peremptory challenges, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. If the district court, after considering all of the relevant circumstances, decides that the relevant evidence establishes, prima fa-cie, purposeful discrimination, appellants must receive a new trial.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Appellants argue that the district court erred in refusing to require the prosecutor to reveal the identity of the Government’s confidential informant. The Government contends that the informant in this case was a "mere tipster," who neither directly participated in nor witnessed
*1544
the transaction, and that the Government was therefore under no obligation to reveal his identity.
See Roviaro
v.
United States,
In addition to challenging their conviction, appellants also challenge their sentences. They contend that the district court gave them the maximum sentence permissible under the statute — 15 years in prison — because they exercised their right to go to trial rather than pleading guilty. We can find nothing in the court’s colloquy with the appellants prior to trial, nor in the court’s colloquy during the sentencing of the appellants, to indicate in any way that the appellants were either being pressured to plead guilty or being punished for not having done so. We therefore reject this claim as well.
. The right to the equal protection of the laws expressed in the fourteenth amendment has been found by implication in the due process clause of the fifth amendment, which itself contains no equal protection clause.
See Johnson
v.
Robison,
. Like many of the white jurors, Beckham testified that he was employed, his wife was a housewife, his child was enrolled in college, neither he nor any of his family members or friends had ever been subject to criminal proceedings, he had never been subject to an IRS audit, he had never been involved in a civil law suit, and he did not have any friends in the field of law enforcement, the legal profession, or the medical profession.
. In contrast to Beckham, whose answers to the judge's questions were the same as those provid *1545 ed by white jurors whom the prosecutor did not strike, prospective juror Daniel Gonzalez testified that a member of his family had been convicted of a crime and served time in prison, that he himself had once been subject to a criminal charge, that he had been a witness in a trial, and that he had several friends who were members of the legal and medical professions.
. In explaining its decision, the district court stated:
In view of the Supreme Court decision which has come down just yesterday with regard to prosecutorial peremptory challenge of black persons, I wanted our record clear there was only one black person among our thirty-five people [on the venire], and that black person was struck by the prosecution. There was no more than one black person, so as far as establishing a pattern during this jury selection process, the Court finds no cause. There was only one person, which I think is a significant factor. If there were more than one person and both of them were struck, or three people, or four people, then we might be able to establish a pattern.
I don’t think that on the basis of what is in this case there is any pattern indicated that this Court could make a finding by design that the prosecutor has eliminated this black person, Mr. Beckham, from the Jury.
. The district court was correct in revisiting appellants’ objection to the prosecutor’s use of the peremptory challenge against Beckham in light of the
Batson
decision.
See Griffith
v.
Kentucky,
